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The text and illustrations of this book 
are reprinted from the Year Book of 
The Pennsylvania Society for 1922 



200 copies printed and bound 






Contents 



List of Guests 7 

Procession of Honour 10 

Table of Honour 12 

The Luncheon 15 

Report of Georges Clemenceau to the President of the French 

Republic 21 

Decree of President Poincare Designating Gen. Foch Marshal 

OF France 22 

Menu 22 

Toasts 25 

Address of Mr. Charles M. Schwab, President of the Society 26 

Address of Marshal Foch 29 

The Press and the Foch Luncheon 30 

Ferdinand Foch, Marshal of France 34 

The Battle of Foch 38 



Illustrations 



Marshal Foch Frontispiece 

Steel Plate 

After photograph copyrighted by Underwood & Underwood. From the 
Luncheon Menu 

Autograph of Marshal Foch Frontispiece 

Facsimile from the Luncheon Menu, autographed by Marshal Foch for 
the Society 

Facsimile of the Menu Cover (slightly reduced) 4 

Facsimile of the Seating List Cover 5 

Facsimile of the Subscription Notice (slightly reduced) 6 

Flags of France and the United States 7 

Facsimile of the Request for Guest Names 9 

Facsimile of the Subscription Card 13 

Facsimile of the Instructions for Escorts 14 

Facsimile of the Admission Card 15 

Facsimile of the Time Notice Sent Out with the Admission Card 17 

Facsimile of Guest Ticket (slightly reduced) 19 

Ornament and Heading from the Luncheon Menu (slightly reduced) ... 21 

Facsimile of Marshal Foch's Place Card at the Table of Honour 23 

Ornament from the Luncheon Menu S^ 

Marshal Foch and Mr. Charles M. Schwab as the Marshal Left the 

Waldorf-Astoria 36 

From a photograph copyrighted by Underwood & Underwood. Taken at 
the Hotel entrance, No. 1 West 33rd Street 

Facsimile of the Personal Letter-Head of Marshal Foch 37 




luncheon for marshal foch. facsimile of the menu cover 

(slightly reduced) 



Marshal Foch 

Luncheon 
of 

The Pennsylvania Society 

November 19 
Waldorf-Astoria 



Seating List 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF THE COVER OF THE 

SEATING LIST 



The Pennsylvania Society, 249 West 13th St., New York 

MARSHAL FOCH 

Luncheon at the Waldorf-Astoria 

Saturday^ November 19 ^ 1921 

Marshal Foch, Generalissimo of the Allied 
Armies in the World War, has signally hon- 
oured The Pennsylvania Society by accepting 
its invitation to be its guest at Luncheon at 
the Waldorf-Astoria on Saturday, November 
19, at 12.30 o'clock. 

Subscription, open to members of The 
Pennsylvania Society and the Society of 
Pennsylvania Women in New York, for ladies 
and gentlemen, $8.00 per cover. 

Ladies and gentlemen will jointly occupy 
tables at the Luncheon. Members may invite 
personal guests and arrange for individual 
tables of ten if desired. 

Admission by ticket only, which must 
positively be presented and surrendered. 

All names for the printed Seating List 
must reach the office of the Society before 
November 12. No names can be inserted 
that are not in hand by that date. 

Charles M. Schwab, President 

Announcement of the Annual Dinner on December 10 will he made later 

LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF THE SUBSCRIPTION 
NOTICE (slightly REDUCED) 




FLAGS OF FRANCE AND THE UNITED STATES j 

Marshal Foch 

Luncheon, November 19, 1921 

The Pennsylvania Society had the high honour of entertaining 
Marshal Ferdinand Foch at Luncheon on Saturday, November 19, 
1921, at the Waldorf-Astoria at half after twelve. The day was an 
exceedingly crowded one for the Marshal, and an early hour was set 
that his other engagements might not be interfered with. 

More than a thousand persons, ladies and gentlemen, took part 
in the luncheon. 

President Charles M. Schwab presided. 

The guests included : 

Marshal Foch. 

His Excellency Mr. J. J. Jusserand, Ambassador of the French 
Republic. 

Mr. Maurice Casenave, Minister Plenipotentiary, Director of the 
French Services in the United States. 

Mr. Gaston Liebert, French Consul-General at New York. 



8 MARSHAL FOCH 

General Desticker, Chief of Marshal Foch's Staff. 

Major Jean de Miery, Aide to Marshal Foch. 

Captain Rene Lhopital, Aide to Marshal Foch. 

Lieutenant Paul de Soubeyran, Aide to Marshal Foch. 

Dr. Paul Andre, Aide to Marshal Foch. 

Count Charles de Chambrun, Councillor of Embassy. 

Mr. Charles Bertrand, Member of the Chamber of Deputies, 
President of the Federation Interalliee des Anciens Combattants. 

Colonel Francis E. Drake, Past Commander American Legion, 
Department of France. 

Colonel Frank Parker, U. S. A., Honorary U. S. Aide to Mar- 
shal Foch. 

Brig.-General George A. Wingate, American Legion. 

Colonel Franklin D'Olier, Past National Commander, Ameri- 
can Legion. 

Colonel deLancey Kountze, American Legion. 

Colonel Cornelius W. Wickersham, American Legion. 

Major William F. Deegan, Commander, Department of New 
York, American Legion. 

Colonel Wade H. Hayes, Past Commander, Department of New 
York, American Legion. 

Colonel Van R. C. King, American Legion. 

Major Lorillard Spencer, American Legion. 

Captain C. E. McCullough, American Legion. 

Captain Donald Strachan, Chairman Second District, New York, 
American Legion. 

Colonel Frank A. Spencer, Jr., American Legion. 

Major Thomas Brady, Chairman, New York County, American 
Legion. 

Major Edward Adams, Commander West End Post, American 
Legion. 

Mr. Henry Buxton, former County Chairman, New York 
County, American Legion. 

Captain Shipley Thomas, Commander First Division Post, 
American Legion. 

The Honourable William C. Sproul, Governor of Pennsylvania. 

The Honourable George W. Wickersham, Past President of the 
Society. 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 9 

The Honourable James M. Beck, Solicitor General of the United 
States; Past President of the Society. 

The Honourable Ogden L. Mills, Member of Congress. 

Captain G. B. Bradshaw, U. S. N. Assistant Commandant Third 
Naval District. 

Mr. Darwin P. Kingsley, President of the Chamber of Com- 
merce of the State of New York. 

Doctor Elmer E. Brown, Chancellor of the New York Uni- 
versity. 

The Right Reverend Thomas J. Garland, D.D., Chaplain of the 
Society. 

Rabbi Stephen S. Wise. 

Lieutenant J. E. Raymond, U. S. A. 

Mr. Robert D. Heinl. 

The Reception Committee for guests and escorts included 
Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Mazet, Mr. James R. Magoffin, Mr. Wm. 
Douglas Moore and Mr. Horace Moran. A special Reception Com- 
mittee that awaited Marshal Foch and his party at the entrance of 
to the hotel consisted of President Charles M. Schwab, Governor 
William C. Sproul, and Director Barr Ferree. 

The Divine blessing was invoked by the Right Reverend Thomas 
J. Garland, D.D., Bishop Suffragan of Pennsylvania and Chaplain of 
the Society. 



MARSHAL FOCH 

GUEST NAMES 



Please send in the names of your guests at tlie 
Foch Luncheon, if not complete at this time, please 
send what names you have. 
Kindly typewrite to avoid errors. 

Last Day November 12, 1921 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF REQUEST FOR 

GUEST NAMES 



10 MARSHAL FOCH 

Procession of Honour 

Marshal Foch and the Guests of the Society 

The Director of the Society : Mr. Barr Ferree 

Banner of the Society. 

Bugler and Drums 

Flag of the United States. 

Flag of the State of Pennsylvania. 

Flag of the State of New York. 

Flag of the First Regiment, 1775 

Flag of the Hanover Associators. 

Flag of the Floating Batteries. 

Flag of the Continental Navy. 

Flag of the Independent Battalion. 

Flag of the First Regiment, Mexican War. 

Flag of the City of Philadelphia. 

Flag of the City of Pittsburgh. 

The Paulist Choristers. 

Flag of the French Republic. 

Marshal Foch and Mr. Charles M. Schwab. 
Mr. J. J. Jusserand and Mr, WilHam Guggenheim. 
Maj. Lorillard Spencer and Mr. H. H. Albright. 
Col. Wade H. Hayes and Mr. W. H. Richardson. 
Mr. Henry Buxton and Mr. W. Irving Stineman. 
Gen. George A. Wingate and Mr. J. H. Zerbey. 
Col. Franklin D'Olier and Mr. W. M. Barrett. 
Dr. Andre and Mr. J. G. White. 
Major Jean de Miery and Mr. C. E. Lotte. 
Col. Francis E. Drake and Col. J. Hollis Wells. 
Bishop Thomas J. Garland and Canon G. F. Nelson. 
Count de Chambrun and Mr. W. S. Benson. 
Col. Van R. C. King and Mr. T. H. Watkins. 
General Desticker and Mr. John K. MacGowan. 
Hon. G. W. Wickersham and Mr. W. H. Woodin. 
Hon. William C. Sproul and Mr. H. E. Tener. 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 11 

Mr. Gaston Liebert and Mr. G. T. Kirby. 

Flag of the City of New York. 

Hon. James M. Beck and Mr. John Gribbel. 
Mr. M. Casenave and Mr. Chester A. Braman. 
Mr. Darwin P. Kingsley and Mr. J. A. Hatfield. 
Mr. Charles Bertrand and Mr. W. M. Lybrand. 
Col. deLancey Kountze and Mr. H. G. Leach. 
Capt. Lhopital and Mr. John C. Barclay. 
Hon. Ogden L. Mills and Mr. P. M. Speer. 
Lieut. Paul de Soubeyran and Mr. L. G. Sheafer. 
Capt. G. B. Bradshaw and Mr. T. A. Gillespie. 
Col. Frank Parker and Mr. H. P. Childs. 
Dr. Elmer E. Brown and Mr. C. C. Adams. 
Col. C. W. Wickersham and Mr. D. George Dery. 
Maj. William F. Deegan and Mr. Frank Northrop. 
Lieut. J, E. Raymond and Mr. A. R. Grier. 
Maj. Edward Adams and Mr. W. H. Worrilow. 

Flag of the City of Harrisburg. 

Capt. C. E. McCullough and Mr. Henry E. Fish. 
Capt. Donald Strachan and Mr. James S. Swartz. 
Col. Frank A. Spencer, Jr., and Mr. Ira G. Ross. 
Maj. Thomas Brady and Mr. T. A. H. Hay. 

Flag of the City of Scranton. 

Flag of the City of Wilkes-Barre. 

Flag of the City of Lancaster. 

Flag of the City of York. 

Flag of the City of Easton. 

Flag of the City of Altoona. 

Flag of the City of Reading. 



12 MARSHAL FOCH 

Table of Honour 

^laj. Lorillard Spencer, American Legion 

Col. Wade H. Hayes, American Legion 

Mr. Henrv' Buxton, American Legion 

Brig.-Gen. George A. Wingate, American Legion 

Col. Franklin D'Olier, American Legion 

Dr. Paul Andre, Aide 

Major Jean de Miery, Aide to Marshal Fock 

Col. Francis E. Drake, 

Past Commander American Legion, Department of France 
E-t. Rev. Thomas J. Garland, D.D.. Chaplain of the Society 

Count Charles de Chambrun, Councillor of Embassy 

Col. \'an R. C. King. American Legion 

General Desticker. Chief of Staff 

Hon. George \V. \\'ickersham. Past President of the Society 

Hon. William C. Sproul, Governor of Pennsylrania 

Mr. Gaston Liebert, French Consid-General 

Marshal Foch 

Mr. Charles M. Schwab, President of the Society 

His Excellency. Mr. J. J. Jusserand. 

Ambassador of the French Republic 
Hon. James ^1. Beck, Solicitor-General of the United States 

Mr. M. Casenave, 

Minister Plenipotentiary, Director of the French Services 
in the United States 
Mr. Dar^\'in P. Kingsley, 

President of the Cliamber of Commerce of the State of Xezv York 
Mr. Charles Bertrand, 

President Federation Interalliee des Anciens Combattants 
Col. deLancey Kountze, American Legion 

Capt. Rene Lhopital. Aide to Marshal Foch 

Hon. Ogden L. :^Iill5. M.C. 
Lieut. Paul de Soubevran, Aide to Marshal Foch 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 



13 



Capt. G. B. Bradshaw, U. S. N., 

Assistant Commandant Third Naval District 
Col. Frank Parker, U. S. A., Honorary U . S. Aide to Marshal Foch 
Dr. Elmer E. Brown, Chancellor, New York University 

Col. C. W. Wicker sham, American Legion 

Col. William F. Deegan, American Legion 

Lieut. J. E. Raymond, U. S. A. 
Maj. Edward Adams, American Legion 



Please draw cheques to the order of The Pennsylvania Society 



The Pennsylvania Society 
249 West I 3 th Street, New York 

Enclosed find $ 



MARSHAL FOCH 

Dated- 



for- 



.seats for the 



Luncheon for Marshal Foch, given by 

Waldorf-Astoria, Saturday, November 19, at 12.30 P.M. 



<iJlddress. 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF THE SUBSCRIPTION 

CASD 



14 MARSHAL FOCH 

MARSHAL FOCH 

The Pennsylvania Society 

Luncheon, November 19, 1921 

WALDORF-ASTORIA 

ESCORTS 

Escorts are asked to present themselves at the Myrtle Room (Fifth 
Avenue end of the Astor Gallery) by 12.15 R M. 

Entrance to the Myrtle Room (which is reserved exclusively for 
the guests of the Society and Escorts) by special ticket, which must be 
presented to the guard at the door. 

Kindly make yourself known to Col. Robert Mazet or Mr. James 
R. Magoffin, Committee of Reception. Assist in identifications and 
introductions. 

When the bugle sounds for Luncheon it is most essential that 
each Escort and his guest be in the Myrtle Room. 

In the Procession of Honour each pair of guest and escort are 
numbered in the Seating List. No. 1 is first. When the numbers are 
called see that your number is in the proper place. Do not come into 
the procession until your number is called. When the procession 
moves walk with extreme slowness; this is essential that the procession 
be kept together. 

Leave your gue^t at the end of the platform by which the Table 
of Honour is approached. The first pair is precisely in the centre; pos- 
sibly the second and third; the remainder of the procession is arranged 
in the order of the seating, so that, after the centre party the next one 
is at the extreme far end of the table as it is entered. No Escort should 
go behind the Table under any circumstances. 

If these arrangements are modified, look for a second version ot 
this paper in the Myrtle Room. 

LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF INSTRUCTIONS 

FOR ESCORTS 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 15 



The Luncheon 

A memorable occasion, truly, and one deserving of the highest 
rank in the history of The Pennsylvania Society. It was in every 
way fitting for the very distinguished guest in whose special honour 
this festivity had been arranged. It was a thrilling moment when 
Marshal Foch, escorted by President Schwab entered the vast dinner 
hall, which was thronged in every part. Not only was the main floor 
crowded with tables, but additional tables were placed in the boxes, 
entirely filling the grand tier and most of the boxes in the second 
tier. There was no space available for late comers. 

The procession of honour was the longest in the history of the 
Society, and comprised nearly two hundred persons. The banner 



MARSHAL FOCH 
LUNCHEON 

NOVEMBER 19, 1921 

THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 

WALDORF-ASTORIA 

12.30 P.M. 

THIS CARD IS POSITIVELY REQUIRED FOR ADMISSION 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH, FACSIMILE OF THE ADMISSION 

CARD 



16 MARSHAL FOCH 

and flags of the Society were carried by American soldiers from 
Governors Island, under the command of Lieut. J. E. Raymond, and 
were especially detailed for this service by the Commanding General. 
The Paulist Choristers in cassocks and surplices gave a special note 
to the procession, to which additional colour was given by the uni- 
forms of the French officers. 

A special reception committee, consisting of President Schwab, 
Governor Sproul and Director Ferree, awaited Marshal Foch at the 
entrance to the Hotel, No. 1 West 33rd St. There an animated 
spectacle was presented. The sidewalks as far as one could see 
from the steps, were thronged with people and every window within 
sight had its group of spectators. The street had been cleared imme- 
diately in front of the doorway, and there a platoon of police in 
column formation, awaited the arrival of our distinguished guest. 
For the first time (and at the request of the Society) the hotel had 
laid a rich red carpet on the sidewalk. The banner and flags of the 
Society, carried by the soldiers, formed a court of honour. High 
police officials superintended the direction of the police and the care 
of the waiting people. With the placing of the flags all the pre- 
liminary arrangements were completed. There was a slight pause. 
Then suddenly a police whistle, and what, but a moment before had 
been an open stretch of street, partly occupied with the column of 
police, seemed filled with motor cars. The Marshal of France had 
arrived. 

The cars emptied and the party moved into the hotel. The en- 
trance corridors and every point of vantage was filled with people, 
guests in the hotel, who had long stood waiting to see Marshal Foch. 
An orderly gathering, well kept in hand by the admirable police 
service of the hotel. The party went at once to Room 106, which 
had been reserved as a special reception room for the Marshal. 
Here preliminary introductions were completed. The Marshal 
graciously autographed two or three menus for the archives of the 
Society, and also a copy of his "Eloge de Napoleon", a handsomely 
bound copy from the collection of the Director, and which was prob- 
ably the last document he expected to see under such circumstances. 
The Marshal's party was so large and so animated, that The 
Pennsylvania Society, in the few representatives there gathered, 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 17 

seemed completely swallowed up and absorbed in it. But it was an 
invasion of the French, very, very welcome to us. 

Thence to the Astor Gallery, where the other special guests 
and escorts had assembled. The procession was quickly formed, and 
the long column, to the sound of drums and bugles, moved to the 
grand ballroom. 



MARSHAL FCX:H 

THE PENNSYLVANIA SCX:iETy 

LUNCHEON 

NOVEMBER 19, 1921 

Participants in the Luncheon for Marshal Foch are 
asked to note particularly that tickets must positively be pre^ 
sented for admission. 

The Luncheon is set for 12.30 P. M. Kindly be very 
prompt, as the Marshal's day is very crowded and we can^ 
not delay him. 

BARR FERREE, Director 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF TIME NOTICE SENT 
OUT WITH THE ADMISSION CARDS 



As is always the case at the Society's functions, a great deal of 
care and taste had been displayed in the decorations, which had been 
designed by Mr. Horace Moran, committee on decoration. A great 
screen of white curtains hung behind the guest table, divided into 
long panels by ropes of green laurel, and having in each panel two 



18 MARSHAL FOCH 

crossed flags of the principal nations engaged in the late war. The 
sign PENNSYLVANIA gleamed aloft in electric lights, and a 
group of American flags crowned the whole. An admirable, dis- 
tinguished and effective background to our table of distinguished 
guests, and forming a fine setting for the great company of ladies 
and gentlemen that crowded the huge room. The balcony fronts 
were covered with greens, and as the procession of honour moved 
into the room the Paulist Choristers had already gained the places in 
the musicians' gallery at the top of the back, where the fresh boy 
faces with their white surplices made a final crown to the decorative 
features of the room. 

While the guests were taking their places the flags were dis- 
tributed through the room and left aloft by the soldier-bearers. 
President Schwab rapped for order; the Chaplain invoked God's 
blessing; the choir sang a verse of the hymn "America" and the 
preliminary exercises were completed. 

The speaking programme was limited to President Schwab's 
address when he presented the Gold Medal of the Society to Marshal 
Foch, and the Marshal's own brief reply. It is generally known that 
the Marshal does not speak or understand English; it seemed quite 
unnecessary, therefore, to subject him to the burden of listening to 
addresses in a tongue he did not understand. Moreover his time was 
exceedingly limited, for his engagements for the day were very 
numerous and we could not justly ask him to make a prolonged stay. 
Weeks of arduous labour, therefore, found fruition in about an hour 
and a half ; time neither too long nor too brief to give The Pennsyl- 
vania Society its most notable event. 

The Marshal's reply to Mr. Schwab was delivered in French. 
Each sentence, as he uttered it, was immediately translated and given 
in English by Col. Francis E. Drake, who stood close beside him 
during its deliver}-'. Col. Drake has a fine, resonant voice, so that 
the Marshal's remarks not only reached his hearers in the language 
they could understand, but doubtless reached also the ears of the deaf 
that have so strange a passion for attending public dinners. 

The fine singing by the Paulist Choristers was particularly ef- 
fective. A verse of "America" was sung immediately after grace. 
When Mr. Schwab announced "The President of the United States" 
at the opening of his remarks, a verse of the "Star-Spangled Banner" 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 19 

was sung. At the conclusion, when he presented the Gold Medal to 
Marshal Foch, they sang a verse of "The Marsellaise". At its con- 
clusion the Marshal made his acknowledgments of the honour done 
him by the Society. 



MARSHAL, rOCH 

Sip? fi^ttnagluattta §^fxtwt$ 

LUNCHEON. NOVEMBER 19, 1931 

WALDORF-ASTORIA, 12.30 P.M. 

GUEST TICKET 

The Guests of die Society are asked to kindly present this card at the 
Myrtle Room (Fifdi Avenue end of the Astor Gallery,) which is necessary 
for admission. 

Kindly inquire for CoL Robert Mazet or Mr. James R. Magoffin, Com- 
mittee of Reception. 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF GUEST TICKET 



No account of this remarkable occasion would be at all complete 
without some reference to a number of things that were not known 
or visible to the assembled company. Doubtless few in the ballroom 
saw the miniature pieces of artillery, guns and tanks, that were placed 
on the guest table, but there they were. No one, perhaps, saw the 
special menu that was prepared for Marshal Foch. This was an 
exceedingly sumptuous affair, bound in hand-tooled French red 
levant, lined with white moire silk and enclosed in a case of red 
levant lined with gray suede, a beautiful and costly souvenir that 
surely no other organization that entertained the Marshal had thought 
to prepare for him. 



20 MARSHAL FOCH 

Of less moment, but a part of the history of the day was the 
fact that as the Marshal was slightly later in arriving than had been 
expected, it was necessary to supply luncheon for the soldier flag- 
bearers and for the choristers, all of whom had expected to return 
to their respective headquarters for their noon meal. It is needless 
to say that the Society was very pleased to arrange these little details. 

Through the courtesy of the Police Commissioner, two officers 
from the Traffic Squad were especially assigned to duty under the 
direction of the Society, inside the hotel. \'eritable giants and 
astoundingly beautiful, these officers stationed at the entrance to the 
Myrtle Room were huge towers of strength that measurably added 
to the picturesqueness of the assembly. 

The ]Menu was exceedingly beautiful and sumptuous. The 
design of the cover, with the exception of the inserts of the Statue of 
Liberty and the Eiffel Tower was taken from panel decorations in 
the Hall of Mirrors, in the palace of Versailles — the room in which 
the Peace Treaty was signed. It was printed in a light amber tint, 
the lines being sunk deep into the substance of the paper, which was 
hea\y Italian hand-made stock, technically known as Lombardia. 
A centre panel, bearing the title, was smooth-pressed in intaglio, 
with the inscription printed in black and embossed. 

This exquisite cover embraced eight pages of a French hand- 
made stock, known as Arches. The first page was blank. The sec- 
ond carried a portrait of ^larshal Foch, engraved on steel, and was 
protected by a leaf of fine tissue. The third page carried a transla- 
tion of the Report of Premier Clemenceau to the President of the 
French Republic, dated August, 1918, wherein it was recommended 
that General Foch have conferred on him the title of Marshal of 
France ; immediately below was the presidential decree conferring 
this high distinction. 



ORNAMENT FROM THE LUNCHEON MENU 



<J)fCarshal Foch 

Report to the President of the French Republic, 
August, 1918. 

To the President: 

The decree of December 24, 1916, revived for the first 
time the dignity of Marshal of France [for General Joffre], 
I have the honour to submit for your signature in the name 
of the Government, and, I can affirm, in the name of all 
France, a decree conferring on General Foch this high na- 
tional recompense. At the hour when the enemy, by a 
formidable offensive on a front of 100 kilometres, sure 
to win the decision and impose on us a German peace which 
would mark the enslavement of the world, General Foch 
and his admirable soldiers conquered. 

Paris disengaged, Soissons and Chateau-Thierry re- 
conquered in full battle, more than 200 villages delivered, 
35,000 prisoners, 700 cannon captured, the hopes haughtily 
proclaimed by the enemy before his attack fell, the glorious 
allied armies thrown with a single bound from the shores of 
the Marne to the banks of the Aisne, such are the results 
of a manoeuvre as admirably conceived by the High Com- 
mand as superbly executed by the incomparable chiefs. 

The confidence placed by the Republic and by all the 
Allies in the conqueror of the Marais de St. Gond, in the 
illustrious chief of the Yser and the Somme, has been fully 
justified. 

The dignity of Marshal of France, conferred on 
General Foch, will not moreover be a recompense for his 
past services, it will consecrate still better in the future the 
authority of the great man of war called to conduct the 
armies of the Entente to the definite victory. 

Clemenceau 



22 MARSHAL FOCH 

DECREE 

Article 1 : The general of division Foch (Ferdinand) 
is named Marshal of France. 

Article 2: The Minister of War is charged with the 
execution of this decree. 

Done at Paris, August 6, 1918. 
poincare 
Clemenceau 



The fourth page carried the menu. 

MENU 

Melons 
Celeris Olives 

Homard, a la Thermidor 

Mignon de Filet, a la Cheron 

Pommes de Terre, Chateau 

Glaces de Fantaisie 

Petits Fours 

Cafe 

The fifth page announced the presentation of the Gold Medal 
of the Society to Marshal Foch. The seventh page reproduced the re- 
markable tribute to France, given by the late President Roosevelt 
in his great address to the Society at the annual dinner on December 
8, 1917: 

"The marvelous French Republic, which stands forever 
as both the most charming and the most heroic figure among 
all the great nations of mankind. France embodies all of 
loveliness and all of valour; beauty is her hand-maiden 
and strength her shield-bearer ; and the shining courage of 
her daughters has matched the courage of her dauntless sons. 
For three years and a half she has walked high of heart 
through the valley of the shadow. Her body is in torture, 
but her forehead is alight with the beauty of the morning. 
Never in all history has there been such steadfast loyalty 
in the doing of dangerous duty, such devotion to country, 
such splendour of service and of sacrifice. And great shall 
be her reward, for she has saved the soul of the world." 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 



23 



3ocietyT^ 




^IOUKDED1899*j, 



0\l 



CLX>0 




LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. FACSIMILE OF THE MARSHALS 
PLACE CARD AT TABLE OF HONOUR 



In addition to the Menu there was placed at each plate a copy 
of the pamphlet by Dr. James Hosmer Penniman, entitled "Our 
Debt to France" and "What Lafayette did for America." These 
booklets were contributed to the Luncheon by Mr. Rodman Wana- 
maker, to whose generous thought fulness this additional note of 
interest was provided. 

It is not, unhappily, the custom of the members of the Society 
to make known to the Dinner Committee any impress made by its 
functions. It is, therefore, impossible for those immediately con- 
cerned with them to know or understand the impression made upon 
the spectators and participants. However one or two quotations 
may be g^ven. 



24 MARSHAL FOCH 

"I cannot leave town," wrote the Hon. James ^I. Beck, "without 
congratulating you on the great Foch Luncheon. . . . Schwab did 
splendidly." 

"Just a moment," wrote a member from Philadelphia, "to ex- 
press to you the admiration I have for the dignity and military pre- 
cision with which the Foch Luncheon was carried off last Saturday. 
I have never seen a luncheon of this magnitude handled so success- 
fully, with everj^body happy and all appreciating the distinguished 
character of the occasion." 

From ladies : 

"]\Iy very warmest congratulation upon the unqualified success 
of The Pennsylvania Societ}* Luncheon to Marshal Foch. The 
limcheon was perfect, the decorations beautiful, and the quotation 
from Theodore Roosevelt brought tears to my eyes. ... It was a 
great privilege to be so close to the world's most distinguished citizen." 

'Tt was perfectly grand I The entire affair was superb." 

"The Foch Luncheon was a great success — everything was 
wonderfully arranged. . . . The concensus of opinion all around 
us was that it was a wonderful success." 

Affairs like the Foch Luncheon not only require weeks of 
exacting preparation, but call for much printed matter. It has long 
been the custom of the Society to put everything relating to its func- 
tions into type. ^lany of these printed papers, being intended for 
specific and limited use. are quite unknown to the membership at 
large. In order that the present record may be as complete as pos- 
sible, all the printed matter issued in connection with the Foch 
Luncheon is here reproduced in facsimile. It is not possible, be- 
cause of its larger size, to reproduce the menu in complete facsimile, 
but all its parts are here shown. 

In an earlier portion of this stmimarv^ the appearance of Marshal 
Foch and his personal party is referred to as a French invasion. As 
a matter of fact the affair was quite the opposite. The French 
people in the person of its most distinguished soldier and his com- 
panions did not invade the purlieus of the Societ}-. but the Society, 
in the person of its President, captured the Marshal. That the So- 
ciety should have Marshal Foch as its guest was a matter that lay 
very close to Mr. Schwab's heart. Even to a man of his commanding 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 25 

position, with the added advantage of a personal acquaintance with 
the Marshal during the actual conduct of the war, this was no slight 
task. The daily press kept the people of the United States well in- 
formed as to the demands made on the Marshal for his time and 
presence, and from the moment that he set foot in America, it was 
apparent these accounts had not been exaggerated. Mr. Schwab may 
or may not count Marshal Foch's acceptance of his invitation as 
among the great successes of his career ; but it certainly ranks among 
the great successes of The Pennsylvania Society. He left nothing 
undone that could be done to secure the end he sought. And there 
were some dark moments when it seemed as though Mr. Schwab's 
great prestige would fail him. But that he was finally successful 
everyone now knows, and this record is but an outline account of a 
very great event. It is but the simple truth to add that the Society 
owes Mr. Schwab a debt of lasting gratitude for the great privilege 
he obtained for it in entertaining Marshal Foch. 

One by one the great figures in the war with Germany have 
visited America. It has not been possible for The Pennsylvania 
Society to entertain all of these heroic personages individually; but 
in entertaining the greatest of them all — the heroic Foch — it has, 
in a sense, expressed its gratitude for the men who so successfully 
laboured for right and for civilization. All the records of the Foch 
Luncheon remain with the Society, including the individual subscrip- 
tion forms and the immense correspondence connected with it. It 
is hoped that some time these may be classified and mounted into 
scrap books as a lasting and complete record of an event in the 
Society's history that must fill the heart of every member with pride 
and satisfaction. 



Toasts 



The President of the United States and the President of France. 
Our Guest, Marshal Foch. 



26 MARSHAL FOCH 

Address of Mr. Charles M. Schwab 
President of the Society 

Marshal Foch, our Distinguished Guest, 

Ladies and Gentlemen of The Pennsylvania Society: 
I speak to-day with some hesitancy, in view of the fact that our 
Distinguished Guest has had speeches read and deHvered to him a 
dozen times a day since his visit to this country, and while I had 
thought of many things that I might say with reference to his won- 
derful military achievements and the fact that he is the greatest 
military man in the history of the world, when it is in the bosom 
of the family of The Pennsylvania Society we, the sons of Pennsyl- 
vania, may speak from the heart, in an informal way, the thoughts 
which are in our minds, as we would say them in the bosom of our 
family if this great Marshal were one of our family guests. 

The thought that comes to me first is very similar to that which 
we enjoyed upon our last luncheon when we entertained a great and 
distinguished man: — that great as is his character from a military 
and statesmanship point of view, the thing that impresses me most, 
and, indeed, of which he is the proudest, is the fact that he is a simple 
citizen of France as we are simple citizens of the United States and 
that he likes most to be called a man of democratic and simple ideas 
and mode of life. The lessons of the war which he has so justly 
won for civilized humanity, he practices within himself in his every- 
day Hfe. For example, when I said to him to-day, "Marshal, you 
must be worn out with this round of receiving and festivities and all 
the duties that you have to attend to," he said, "My dear friend, this 
is a great pleasure. It was during the war, when the movement of 
a great body of soldiers meant perhaps the loss of thousands or tens 
of thousands of lives, that my mind was truly worried and upon 
which I had to think with great depth, but here amongst my friends 
in America, the country that is so closely linked with my own coun- 
try, I have nothing but supreme happiness in meeting all of its people, 
and I wish it were within my power physically to do that which is in 
my mind mentally, and that is to grasp every American man and 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 27 

woman by the hand and proclaim them and be honoured in calling 
them my friend." 

I spoke at the Iron and Steel Dinner last night. I told the 
Marshal what the great State of Pennsylvania had done for the iron 
and steel production of the World War; that out of the 50 million 
tons of steel supplied for the war, more than 40 million of those 
tons came from the State of Pennsylvania. It is hard to conceive 
what 50 million tons of steel means to the lay mind, but you might 
grasp it if I tell you that 50 million tons of steel would build a rail- 
way about ten times around this earth. I might tell you that we 
dreamed the dream of a bridge of ships across the Atlantic, and yet 
50 million tons of steel placed in the hulls of ships would actually 
make a bridge from America to France. And that is what we have 
done in the State of Pennsylvania. We do not claim, my dear 
Marshal, that we have in any way won the war; we are all prone 
to boast what we have done ; but we are proud of your commenda- 
tion and your approval in saying that we have done our duty. The 
Marshal has said, when I congratulated him a few moments ago 
upon his wonderful accomplishments, "My dear Mr. Schwab, we 
have done nothing more than every loyal citizen of every country 
did, and that was : his best under all circumstances." 

Ladies and Gentlemen of The Pennsylvania Society, our chief 
kindness to this great man is to do as much as we can to save his 
physical strength. He has to meet thousands of people and thou- 
sands of Societies, and we are not going to indulge in long speeches 
or anything of that sort. Suffice it to say that I regard this as a 
red letter day in The Pennsylvania Society. We have here a man 
as our guest to-day who has distinguished this, our Society, from. 
the other Societies, who will go down in history as the greatest 
figure, politically and militarily, that ever lived in the history of the 
world ; a man that commanded at one time nearly 7 millions of 
troops in the fields. Gentlemen, we play with material things of 
great magnitude and think we are doing wonderful things, but com- 
pare our deeds to those of this man who had within his hands the 
movements of 7 million human lives and the responsibility that de- 
volved upon him in so doing, and the splendid manner in which he 
has acquitted himself for this great era of civilization ! I spoke last 
night the words that any patriotic Pennsylvanian would have spoken 



28 MARSHAL FOCH 

with reference to the great armament works — with which the Marshal 
is so famiHar — at Bethlehem and said that if peace would come and 
peace could be assured, we would gladly sink them to the bottom of 
the sea and forget that they ever existed. But if works are necessary, 
if establishments like Bethlehem are necessary for the protection 
of our homes and our families and our firesides, we will up-build 
them and defend them with the same energy that we will scrap them 
in the interest of peace. 

Now, my friends, there is much that might be said upon an 
occasion of this kind. For me, I am satisfied, — although I had met 
the Marshal in France before, I am satisfied to have seen him, to 
have studied his character more intimately, as we do upon occasions 
of this sort, to have you, my friends of Pennsylvania, see this man, 
to have you transmit to your children and through them to your 
children's children, this historical event in which this great and dis- 
tinguished Marshal has honoured us. 

It has been the practice of The Pennsylvania Society to bestow 
a Medal of Honour upon men of great distinction. Our distinguished 
French Ambassador here has been the recipient of this medal here- 
tofore in years gone by. I am sure the Ambassador will agree with 
me that never has The Pennsylvania Society at any time honoured 
themselves more, or more worthily bestowed the Gold Medal of the 
Society than they do when they present it to Marshal Foch. And 
so, my friends, bearing the deepest mark of appreciation, amount- 
ing, indeed, my dear Marshal Foch, to almost reverence, we, the 
people from Pennsylvania present to you, with all the love and all 
the good wishes that can be contained in the true American heart, 
the Medal of The Pennsylvania Society, the best token that is within 
our power to present. 

(As Marshal Foch rose to receive the Medal from President 
Schwab, the Paulist Choristers sang a verse of "The Marseillaise," 
the entire company standing. Amid great applause Marshal Foch 
began his address.) 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 29 



Address of Marshal Foch 

Pennsylvania during the War not only sent us an immense 
material assistance, but sent us an immense moral assistance, sent 
us the assistance of all kinds, imbued at all times with one idea, 
that of victory. But the Pennsylvania Society has reserved for 
me a very agreeable, a very splendid surprise ; this surprise has been 
in this remarkable, this touching, this affectionate welcome which 
you have extended to me to-day. And since The Pennsylvania So- 
ciety considers itself as a family, I ask The Pennsylvania Society to 
consider me as a member of the family. I shall keep this Medal of 
The Pennsylvania Society as a talisman, I shall keep it as a souvenir, 
which will remain with me for always, of this great Society, and I 
thank you from the bottom of my heart for the reception which you 
have given me to-day and for this token of that affection. 



The President: 

The great Marshal says again that while he would be happy to 
receive everybody, it is utterly impossible. He wishes you to ac- 
cept his wish for the act and to excuse him, because he has another 
important engagement for every hour of the day, and if the ladies 
and gentlemen will remain seated until I have escorted the Marshal 
out of the room we will indeed be pleased. 

The meeting is now adjourned and I thank you all kindly for 
the reception to the Marshal, which he greatly appreciated. 



30 MARSHAL FOCli 



The Press and the Foch Luncheon 

[Thomas F. Healey in The Public Led'ger, Philadelphia, November 

20, 1921.] 

Men and women of Pennsylvania to-day tendered Marshal 
Ferdinand Foch the chief honour of a day of triumphant honours by 
the citizens of New York. The Marshal was the guest of The 
Pennsylvania Society of New York at luncheon in the Waldorf 
Astoria. The medal of the Society was pinned upon his breast by 
Charles M. Schwab. Then he was acclaimed by Mr. Schwab and 
more than 1000 Pennsylvanians as the greatest military hero of his- 
tory ; as a great statesman, but withal a simple, courteous, democratic 
gentleman. 

Mr. Schwab, president of the Society, told the Marshal he knew 
of no greater tribute to pay him than to say that the people of 
America, and particularly the people of Pennsylvania, feel for him 
all the love which honest American hearts are capable of expressing. 

"You practice in your daily life the great lessons of the war," 
said Mr. Schwab. "We of Pennsylvania will try to emulate you. 
We did what we could to aid you in your great struggle for civiliza- 
tion. Pennsylvania sent you men and steel. We sent you 40,000.- 

000 tons of steel. We sent you our faith and hope, and so to-day 
we greet you as the greatest military genius and hero of history. 

"Last night I spoke words in your presence which any real 
American, any true Pennsylvanian would speak. I said we would 
gladly sink our works in the ocean if they stood in the way of peace. 

1 say that now, but if the upbuilding of those plants is necessary 
to our defense and our progress, we will maintain them and improve 
them with the same energy that we will scrap them if required to do 
so in the interest of peace." 

Mr. Schwab was the only speaker. When he had pinned the 
medal of honour upon the Marshal's breast, the conqueror of Germany 
arose and electrified the audience by displaying an amazing knowl- 
edge of some of the things Pennsylvania had done during the war. 

"I know that Pennsylvania sent us great amounts of materials 
of all sorts," he said. "I know that her men were amon?: the finest 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 31 

who crossed the sea. I know your hopes and aspirations were 
always with us, that you always were intent upon victory. 

"I am deeply touched by this remarkable and affectionate greet- 
ing. Mr. Schwab said you considered yourselves members of a great 
big family. I am glad to hear that because I want to be admitted 
to that family circle. 

"This medal I shall always keep as a token of your kindness, 
your appreciation and as one of the chief honours bestowed upon me 
in America." 

From the moment he entered the Waldorf portals until he 
marched into the dining room escorted by Mr. Schwab at the head 
of a gala procession of honour. Marshal Foch was greeting Pennsyl- 
vanians, resident in New York, and from towns all over the Key- 
stone State, who were here as guests of the Society. Immediately 
behind the Marshal and Mr. Schwab walked Ambassador Jusserand 
and Governor Sproul. 

While the dinner was in progress the Paulist Choristers sta- 
tioned in a balcony sang patriotic hymns of France and America. 
Marshal Foch, showing not the slightest strain of his strenuous 
round of receptions and dinners, engaged in animated conversation 
with Mr. Schwab, Bishop Garland, Governor Sproul and others at the 
table. When he spoke his voice rang through the crowded ballroom 
with the strength and vigour of a man half his age. 

The reception given him when he stood in his place to speak was 
remarkable. Every eye was centered upon the warrior in blue. 
Every voice was raised in praise of him. With gestures that signified 
the ultimate in what we Americans designate "punch" he volleyed 
forth his words of praise and commendation for the works and the 
merits of the people of Pennsylvania. 

When he had finished Mr. Schwab again arose and again told 
him that Americans marveled at his greatness. 

"We cannot say too much to honour you, my dear Marshal," said 
Mr. Schwab. "When we contemplate the task you performed our 
imagination, our power of expression fail us." 

Turning to the members of the Society, Mr. Schwab, placing 
his hand upon the Marshal's shoulder, said : 

"Great as is this man's character from the military aand states- 
manship point of view, you should know that he is great in many 



32 MARSHAL FOCH 

other respects. He is not only proud to be a soldier ; he is proud to 
be a citizen of France, a simple democratic citizen of our sister 
republic. 

"He is an intrepid man. When I said to him to-day, 'Marshal, 
you must be quite worn out with the exertions put upon you by this 
incessant demand for your presence that we may do you honour/ 
he said to me : 'It is a great pleasure. When we were in the field of 
battle, when it was my duty to direct movements of great bodies of 
troops, then, indeed, I had to think deeply. But now I find pleasure. 
I love to meet your great people and do honour to them.' 

"That is the simplicity of the man who directed the movements 
of 7,000,000 human beings." 

But despite the strength and willingness displayed by Marshal 
Foch in attending so many dinners, luncheons and receptions, Mr. 
Schwab asked the members of the Society to permit the Marshal to 
depart without a personal greeting to each individual present. 

"He would gladly shake the hand of each of you," said Mr. 
Schwab, "but instead of that he expresses his love for each of you." 

[The Inquirer, Philadelphia, November 20, 1921.] 

"Consider me a member of your own family." These words of 
Marshal Ferdinand Foch's electrified the 1200 members of The 
Pennsylvania Society and their guests assembled at luncheon in the 
Waldorf-Astoria to honour him by presenting a gold medal. 

Marshal Foch spoke in French, but so simple, so kindly and 
sincere were his words that they leaped across the barrier of 
language, and long before the translator had opportunity to catch up 
with him the greater part of the assemblage had grasped his meaning 
and started to cheer. 

They had just been told by Charles M. Schwab, the president of 
the Society, who had made the presentation, that Marshal Foch was 
far prouder of being a simple citizen of France than he was of being 
the greatest military leader of the ages, with 7.000,000 men at his 
command, and here was proof positive of this fact. 

It was a gathering which included not only the Pennsylvanians 
present, but all those who were not there as well. There was some- 
thing delightfullv home-like and informal about the whole atmosphere 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 33 

of the occasion. Foch, the stern commander, receded into infinite 
distance, and in his place stood Foch, the man. There were many 
distinguished men at the luncheon to honour the doughty little French 
warrior, and those at the speaker's table included Governor William 
C. Sproul, of Pennsylvania, George W. Wickersham, member of 
President Roosevelt's Cabinet, and a former president of The Penn- 
sylvania Society; M. Casenave, Minister Plenipotentiary, Director of 
French services in the United States ; Count Charles de Chambrun ; 
Gaston Liebert, French Consul-General in New York; Col. Franklin 
D'Olier, of the American Legion ; Darwin P. Kingsley and James 
M. Beck, Solicitor General of the United States. M. Jusserand, 
French Ambassador, arrived late and received an ovation of his own, 
as he went to greet the guest of honour. 

Amid a tremenduous demonstration the guests of honour entered 

the room, led by Marshal Foch and Mr. Schwab 

The rendering of the "Star- Spangled Banner,'' "America," and "The 
Marseillaise" by the Paulist Choristers was an impressive feature of 
the luncheon. The whole affair was made necessarily brief by the 
fact that Marshal Foch had to hasten up to Columbia University. 




LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. ORNAMENT FROM THE MENU 



34 MARSHAL FOCH 

Ferdinand Foch * 

Marshal of France 

Ferdinand Foch was born at Tarbes, France, August 4, 1851; 
his father at that time was secretary- of the Prefecture. He studied 
in the colleges of Tarbes and Rodez, and w^th the Jesuits at 
Polignan, and then went to the Jesuit college of St. Mihiel at St. 
Etienne. In 1869 he attended the Jesuit college of St. Clement at 
Metz. He entered the war of 1870 as a volunteer, but the armistice 
was signed before he had completed his period of instruction. 



* This brief sketch of Marshal Foch follows in outline the admirable intro- 
duction by the Commandant A. Grasset to his book "Preceptes et Judgements 
du Marechal Foch." This outline of the Marshal's military career was also 
published in "L'lllustration" for March 15, 1919. illustrated with maps of the 
Marshal's battles in France. The maps in Commandant Grasset's book are 
chiefly illustrative of the Marshal's comments on the art of war. The book, 
together with the historical introduction has been translated by Hilaire Belloc 
and published imder the title of "Precepts and Judgments" by Marshal Foch. 
The maps that appeared in the French edition, as well as those in "LTllustra- 
tion" are omitted from the English version. The book is a text-book sum- 
marizing Marshal's Foch's military principles in concise and handy form. It 
presents the permanent principles of warfare on which he constructed his 
strategy. He presents the problem historically and technically, and gives the 
laws of military command. 

Other sources used in the present sketch were : "Le Commandant Unique. 
Premiere Partie. Foch et les Armees d'Occident" by Mermeix, from which 
the list of "Battle of Foch" has been drawn. An admirable review of the 
military events of 1918, with outlines of the earlier history of the war, is 
given in General Mangin's remarkable book. ''Comment finit la Guerre." Other 
excellent books are "Le Chemin de la Victoire (1914-1918)" and "La Bataille 
de France (21 Mars-11 Novembre, 1918)" both by Louis Madelin. This author 
quite fails to do justice to the American co-operation in the war; which, how- 
ever, is fully given by General Mangin in his book. A very recent publication 
on Marshal Foch is the series of papers by Paul Painleve, "Comment j'ai 
nomme Foch et Petain" published in "La Revue de Paris" beginning with the 
number for December. 1921. 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 35 

November 1, 1871, he became a student at Ecole Polytechnique. 
In 1873 he was at Fontainebleau. In 1875 he was lieutenant in the 
24th Artillery. In 1878 he was captain of the 10th Regiment of 
Artillery. He entered the Ecole Superieure de Guerre in 1885. He 
remained with the staff of the division of Montpellier imtil 1891, 
when he was promoted chief of squadron and was called to the Third 
Bureau of the Staff of the Army. After having commanded the 
mounted batteries of the 13th Regiment of Artillery, he was recalled 
to the staff of the Army, and on October 31 was named adjunct 
professor of military history, strategy and applied tactics at the 
Ecole Superieure de Guerre. In 1896 he became lieutenant-colonel 
and full professor. 

Always a devout Catholic, with a brother a Jesuit, the anti- 
clerical criticism of the time caused Lieutenant-Colonel Foch's 
retirement from the Ecole Superieure de Guerre in 1901, when he 
was sent to join a regiment. In 1903 he became colonel and was 
placed in command of the 35th Regiment of Artillery at Vannes. In 
1905 he was chief of staff of the Fifth Army Corps at Orleans. In 
1907 he became Brigadier- General and was placed on the Staff of the 
Army. Shortly after M. Clemenceau made him commandant of the 
Ecole de Guerre. In 1911 he became General of Division with com- 
mand of the 13th Division at Chaumont; in 1912 he was commandant 
of the 8th Army Corps and, on August, 23, 1913, commandant of the 
20th Corps at Nancy. 

It was with the troops of the 20th Corps that General Foch 
began his career in the great war with Germany. The 20th Corps 
formed part of the Second Army, commanded by General de Cas- 
telnau, and held a portion of the frontier, where some of the earliest 
conflicts were fought in the vicinity of Nancy. To follow in detail 
the military career of General Foch would be to sketch almost the 
entire history of the war ; only a few special points can be noted here. 
He commanded the Ninth Army in the first battle of the Marne, 
succeeding which he became adjunct to the Commander-in-Chief, 
General Joffre, with the special duty of co-ordinating the operations 
of the French armies of the North, in which capacity he took a no- 
table part in the battle of the Yser. He directed the following battle 
of Artois, and in the battle of the Somme commanded the groups of 
armies of Favolle and Micheler. 



36 MARSHAL FOCH 

On September 30, 1916, General Foch attained the age by which 
he would have retired from active service by the existing law : the 
Government gave him the Military Medal and retained him in active 
service. At that time he was considered as a successor in the high 
command to General Joffre, but was passed over on the alleged 
ground of ill health. General Joffre refused to be separated from 
so valuable an associate, and on December 13, 1916, obtained from 
the Government the creation of a Bureau of Studies of the great 
inter-alHed questions, and confided its direction to General Foch. 
An elaborate study of the defense of Switzerland, in case its neu- 
trality would be violated by the Germans as they had done in Bel- 
gium, followed. May 15, 1917, General Foch became chief of the 
General Staff, replacing General Petain, who had become command- 
ant of the Armies of the North and North-East. 

In October, 1917, the Austrian-German campaign against Italy 
began, and French troops were sent to Italy, where General Foch 
quickly followed them. Meanwhile the Germans had matured their 
plans for their great offensive of the spring of 1918 an eventuality 
that General Foch had foreseen in November, 1917. The tragedies 
of that dreadful series of battles need not be rehearsed here. It is 
sufficient to point out that the Allies were thoroughly alarmed, and 
the long-discussed necessity for a unity of allied command was 
brought to a head. At a meeting held on March 26, 1918, at Doul- 
lens, General Foch on the proposition of the British Government, 
was charged to co-ordinate the operations of the Allied armies ; be- 
fore the month was over he was designated Generalissimo of the 
French, English, American and Belgain forces fighting on the 
Western Front. 

The great moment of his career had arrived. The great cam- 
paign from its beginnings in the dark hours of March to its triumphal 
conclusion in November, 1918, was the "Battle of Foch." The 
whole history of the war in Western Europe is summed up in his 
name. Yet General Foch himself fought no battles in this remark- 
able campaign, and personally led no troops. His place was at the 
Grand Headquarters General, and in a quiet and retired spot he 
directed millions of men, conquered utterly a bitter and resourceful 
foe, and superintended events that emancipated humanity and 




Brig-Gen. G. A. Wingate 
Marshal Foch 



Col. Francis E. Drake 
Mr. Schwab 



LUNCHEON FOR MARSHAL FOCH. MARSHAL FOCH AND MR. 

CHARLES M. SCHWAB AS THE MARSHAL LEFT THE 

WALDORF-ASTORIA 



THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 37 

changed the face of Europe. The splendour of these deeds, the 
greatest events of our own time, are still apparent to every living 
soul ; and countless books will keep alive the tremendous work of 
Marshal Foch for all time. 



8, Bd , des IriYalides. 

Le Marechal Foch 

Paris, le 19 Octobre 1921 



FACSIMILE OF THE PERSONAL LETTER-HEAD OF MARSHAL FOCH 



38 MARSHAL FOCH 



The Battle of Foch 

The following list summarizes the chief battles of the campaign 
from March to November, 1918, known as the "Battle of Foch." 
The names of the battles are those given by the Historical Section 
of the Army Staff. 

1 Battle of the Avre, March 26-April 5. 

2 First battle of Xoyon, March 26. 

3 Battle of Flanders, April 9-June. 

4 Battle of the Aisne, May 27-June. 

5 Battle of the Matz, June 9. 

6 Battles of the Mountain of Reims and of Prosnes-Massiges, 
July 15-18. 

7 Battle of the Soisonnais and of the Ourcq, July 18-28. 

8 Battle of the Tardenois, July 29-August 6. 

9 Battle of Montdidier August 8-15. 

10 Second Battle of Noyon. or Battle of the Oise and the 
Ailette, August 20. 

11 Battle of Savy-Dallon, September 10. 

12 Battle of Vauxaillon, September 14-15. 

13 Battle of St. Mihiel September 12-13. 

14 Battle of Montfaucon. September 26-October 15. 

15 Battle of Sommepy. September 24-October 15. 

16 Battle of Chateau-Thierry. September 20-October 4. 

17 Battle of St. Quentin. September 25-October 4. 

18 Battle of Mont d'Origuz, October 15-20. 

19 Battle of the Serre, October 20-30. 

20 Battle of Chesne and Buzancey, November 1-5. 

21 Second Battle of Guise, November 4-5. 

22 Battle of Thierache, November 6-11. 

23 Battle of Mezieres, November 8-11. 

24 Battle of the Cretes de Flanders. September 27-October 1. 

25 Battle of Roulers, October 14-15. 

26 Battle of the Lys and the Escault, October 20-November 11. 



n 



Marshal Foch 

Luncheon 

of 

The Pennsylvania Society 

November 19 
Waldorf-Astoria 



Seating List 



Procession of Honour 

Marshal Foch and the Guests of the Society 

1 Banner of the Society 

Bugler and Drums 

2 Flag of the United States 

3 Flag of the State of Pennsylvania 

4 Flag of the State of New York 

5 Flag of the First Regiment, 1775 

6 Flag of the Hanover Associators 

7 Flag of the Floating Batteries 

8 Flag of the Continental Navy 

9 Flag of the Independent Battalion 

10 Flag of the First Regiment, Mexican War 

11 Flag of the City of Philadelphia 

12 Flag of the City of Pittsburgh 

The Paulist Choristers. 

13 Flag of the French Republic 

1 Marshal Foch and Mr. Charles M. Schwab 

2 Mr. J. J. Jusserand and Mr. William Guggenheim 

3 Mr. Lorillard Spencer and Mr. H. H. Albright 

4 Mr. Wade H. Hayes and Mr. W. H Richardson 

5 Mr. Henry Buxton and Mr. W. Irving Stineman 

6 Gen. George A. Wingate and Mr. J. H. Zerbey 

7 Col. Franklin D'Olier and Mr. W. M. Barrett 

8 Dr. Andre and Mr. J. G. White 

9 Major Jean Memierry and Mr. C. E. Lotte 

10 Col. Francis E. Drake and Col. J. Hollis Wells 

11 Bishop Thomas J. Garland and Canon G. F. Nelson 

12 Count de Chambrun and Mr. W. S. Benson 

13 Col. Van R. C. King and Mr. T. H. Watkins 

14 General Desticker and Mr. John K. MacGowan 

15 Hon. G. W. Wickersham and Mr. W. H. Woodin 

16 Hon. William C. Sproul and Mr. H. E. Tener 

17 Mr. Gaston Liebert and Mr. G. T. Kirby 

14 Flag of the City of New York 



Procession of Honour — Continued 

18 Hon. James M. Beck and Mr. John Gribbel 

19 Mr. M. Casenave and Mr, Chester A. Braman 

20 Mr. Darwin P. Kingsley and Mr. J. A. Hatfield 

21 ]Mr. Charles Bertrand and Mr. W 31. Lybrand 

22 Col. de Lancey Kountze and ^Ir. H. G. Leach 

23 Capt. L'Hopital and Mr. John C, Barclay 

24 Hon. Ogden T. Mills and ^Ir. P. M. Speer 

25 Lieut, de Soubeyran and Mr. L. G. Sheafer 

26 Capt. G. B. Bradshaw and Mr. T. A. Gillespie 

27 Col. Frank Parker and Mr. H. P. Childs 

28 Dr. Elmer E. Brown and Mr C. C. Adams 

29 Col. C. W. Wickersham and Mr. D. George Dery 

30 yir. Wiliam F. Deegan and Mr. Frank Northrop 

31 Mr. James M. Blackwell and Mr. A. R. Grier 

32 Dr. Edward Adams and Mr. W. H. Worrilow 

15 Flag of the City of Harrisburg 

33 Capt. C. E. McCullough and ^^Ir. Henry E. Fish 

34 Mr. Donald Strachan and Mr. James S. Swartz 

35 Mr. Frank A. Spencer. Jr.. and Mr. Ira G. Ross 

36 ^Ir. Thomas Brady and Mr. T. A. H. Hay 



16 


Flag 


of t±ie Cit\- 


of 


Scranton 


17 


Flag 


of the Cirv- 


of 


Wilkes-Barre 


18 


Flag 


of the City 


of 


Lancaster 


19 


Flag 


of the City 


of 


York 


20 


Flag 


of the City 


of 


Easton 


21 


Flag 


of the City 

. 1 _ /^' . 


of 


Altoona 

T-> !• 



22 Flag of the Cit>- of Reading 



Table of Honour 



1 Mr. Lorillard Spencer, Amefican Legion 

2 Mr. Wade H. Hayes, American Legion 

3 Mr. Henry Buxton, American Legion 

4 General George A. Wingate, American Legion 

5 Col. Franklin D'Olier, American Legion 

6 Dr. Paul Andre 

7 Major Jean Memierry, Aide to Marshal Foch 

8 Col. Francis E. Drake, 

Past Comander American Legion, Department of France 

9 Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Garland, D.D., Chaplain of the Society 

10 Count Charles de Chambrun, Counsellor, French Embassy 

11 Col. Van R. C. King, American Legion 

12 General Desticker, Chief of Staff 

13 Hon. George W. Wickersham, Past President of the Society 

14 Hon. William C. Sproul, Governor of Pennsylvania 

15 Mr Gaston Liebert, French Consul-General 

16 Marshal Foch 

17 Mr. Charles M. Schwab, President of the Society 

18 His Excellency, Mr. J. J. Jusserand, Ambassador of the French Republic 

19 Hon. James M. Beck, Solicitor-General of the United States 

20 His Excellency, Mr. M. Casenave, 

Minister Plenipotentiary, Director of the French Services in the U. S. 

21 Mr. Darwin P. Kingsley, 

President of the Chamber of Cofnmerce of the State of New York 

22 Mr. Charles Bertrand, 

President Federation Interalliee des Anciens Combattants'. 

23 Col. de Lancey Kountze, American Legion 

24 Capt. Rene L'Hopital, Aide to Marshal Foch 

25 Hon. Ogden T. Mills, M.C. 

26 Lieut. Paul de Soubeyran, Aide to Marshal Foch 

27 Capt. G. B. Bradshaw, U.S.N., 

Assistant Commandant Third Naval District 

28 Col. Frank Parker, U.S.A., Honorary U. S. Aide to Marshal Foch 

29 Dr. Elmer E. Brown, Chancellor, New York University 

30 Col. C. W. Wickersham, American Legion 

31 Mr. William F. Deegan, American Legion 

32 Mr. James M. Blackwell, American Legion 

33 Dr. Edward Adams, American Legion 

3 



Alphabetical List 

Tables 101 to 209 are in the Boxes 



Aaron, Mr. & Mrs. H. A. 41 

Abbott, Mr. & Mrs. Franklin 16 

Adams, Mr. C. C. 53 

Adams, Dr. Edward Dais 

Adams, Mrs. Ellis 120 

Adams, Mr. & Mrs. George L. 38 

Adams, Mr. Edward D. 38 

Afflerback, Mr. Gurney F. 119 

Ahearn, Mr. H. A. 65 

Ahlstrom, Mr. C. F. 12 

Albright, Mr. & Mrs. Harry H. 114 

Alexander, Mr. & Mrs. H. F. 11 

Alexander, Miss Dorothy 11 

Anderson, Mr. Nils 61 

Anderson, Mr. & Mrs. W. G. 30 

Andre, Dr. Paul Dais 

Anewalt, Mr. & Mrs. W. H. 58 
Appel, Mr. & Mrs John W., Jr. 15 

Appel, M. John W., Sr. 15 

Appel, Mr. & Mrs. Josetph H. 15 

Arkush, Miss A. 125 

Arkush, Mr. R. 125 

Armstrong, Mr. J. Sinclair 14 

Auchu, Mr. & Mrs. Henry 62 

Backus, Mrs. Henry Clinton 13 

Badger, Mrs. Irving 35 

Bainbridge, Mrs. Charles 12 3 

Balderston, Mr. George W. 67 

Baldrige, Hon. & Mrs. Thos. J. 30 

Ball, Miss Dorothy 10 

Barber, Miss Mary Foster 20 

Barclay, John C. 107 

Barker, Dr. & Mrs. O. G. A. 59 

Barrett, Mr. William M. 21 

Barrett, Miss Mary H. 21 

Beaver, Mr. & Mrs. William P. 103 

Beck, Hon. James M. Dais 

Beinecke, Mr. & Mrs. E. J. 10 

Bender, Mr. C. W. 63 

Benedict, Miss Mavis 120 

Benjamin, Mr. & Mrs. Frank P. 59 

Bennett, Mr. & Mrs. Walter H. 21 

Bennett, Miss 21 

Benson, Mr. & Mrs. B. D. 29 



Benson, Mrs. C. B. 18 

Benson, Miss Jane 18 

Benson, Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. 29 

Benson, Mr. & Mrs. William S. 18 

Berg, Mr. & Mrs. Charles I. 102 

Bermingham, Dr. F. H. 12 

Bernhard, Mr. & Mrs. A. 66 

Bernhard, Mr. & Mrs. E. B. 66 

Bernhard, Mr. & Mrs. Henry 61 

Bertrand, Mr. Charles Dais 

Bieisecker, Mrs. John S. 205 

Bigler, Mr. & Mrs. A. W. 203 

Billings, Mrs. C. W. 204 

Binns, Mr. Edward H. 25 

Blackwell, James M. Dais 

Blanchard, Mr. A. B. 46 

Block, Mr. Benjamin 12 

Bohlayer, Miss Eloise 201 

Boll, Mr. Charles S. 44 

Boll, Mr. Charles W. 44 

Bollard, Mrs. Mary A. 35 

Boocock, Mr & Mrs. Murray 207 

Boyan, Miss Mary I. 32 

Brady, Mr. Thomas 4 
Braman, Mr. & Mrs. Chester A. 20 

Braun, Mr. Robert 117 

Bray, Miss Elizabeth K. 13 

Bremond, Mrs. Howard S. 125 

Bremond, Mrs. John 125 

Brew, Mr. William P. 5 3 

Bradshaw, Captain G. B. Dais 

Brock, Mr. Preiston M. 60 

Broderick, Bishop B. Fortuna 65 

Brodhead, Mr. Alex. L 38 

Brodhead, Miss Anna L. 122 

Brodhead, Miss Emily E. 122 

Brodhead, Miss Susan W. 38 

Brooks, Mr. George M. 62 

Brown, Dr. Elmer E. Dais 

Brown, Mr. Lawrence E. 52 

Brown, Dr. & Mrs. Samuel A. 106 

Brown, Mrs. W. Harrison 13 

Buhler, Mr. E. 54 

Bunnell, Mr. R. D. 3 

Burgoyne, Mr. Andrew C. 31 



Buxton, Mr. Henry Dais 

Byles, Mr. & Mrs. Axtell J. 29 

Byrne, Mr. & Mrs. Tliomas F. 48 

Campbell, Miss Marguerite A. 10 3 

Candler, Mr. & Mrs. R. W. 2 

Candler, Miss Rosalie 2 

Candler, Mr. Marsden 2 

Carey, Mr. Martin 33 

Carey, Miss 33 

Carlisle, Dr. £c Mrs. J. H. 2 9 

Carey, Mr. & Mrs. W. F. 22 

Carpenter, Mr. & Mrs. W. T. C. 64 

Carpary, Mr. A. H. 12 

Carter, Mrs. 32 

Casenave, Mr. M. Dais 

Cass, Mr. Joseph K. 30 

Cassell, Mr. James C. 206 

Cawtlira, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. 102 

Chamberlain, Mrs. J. C. 20 

Chambrun, Count Charles de Dais 

Chase, Miss Ethel W. 29 

Childs, Capt. & Mrs. Harold P. 50 

Choiseul, Mmei. Rene de 35 

Clare, Mr. &. Mrs. Raymond J. 12 3 

Clarke, Mr. Kenneth 20 

Clarkson, Mr. Charles H. 67 

Clifford, Mr. E. L. 117 

Cole, Mr. & Mrs. Howard E. 33 

Collins, Mr. & Mrs. Maurice W. 56 

Cooke, Mrs. Abbot S. 39 

Cooke, Miss 39 

Cooke, Mr. George G. 55 
Conyngham, Mr. & Mrs. John N. o 

Cornell, Mrs. Vida R. 40 

Coulston, Mr. & Mrs. John W. 4 7 

Coulston, Mr. & Mrs. W. Ivan 47 

Courboin, Mr. Charles M. 113 

Crane, Mr. & Mrs. Theron I. 43 

Crary, Miss Martha L. 201 

Crary, Miss Natalie B. 201 

Crary, Miss Sara W. 201 

Cregin, Mrs. Charles Allen 40 

Cromwell, Mr. & Mrs. Lincoln 17 

Crowley, Mr. P. E. 124 

Curtis, Dr. George L. 32 

Curtiss Mrs. R. A. 23 

Custer, Mr. L. R. 110 

Cuthell, Mr. & Mrs. Chester W. 105 

Cuyler, Col. Telamon 20u 

Daly, Mr. & Mrs. K. W. 44 

Darlington, Mrs. J. H. 26 

Davis, Miss Emma E. Ill 

Davis, Miss N. E. 34 

Davis, Mr. & Mrs. William C. 36 

Day, Mrs. Wm. Harrison 32 
De Bermingham, Dr. & Mrs. J. M. 65 

De Bevoise, Brig. Gen. C. I. 28 



Debry, Mr. P. C. 54 

Decker, Mr, Oliver J. 53 

Deegan, Mr. William F. Dais 

Dempwolf, Mr. C. H 45 

Dempwolf, Mr. J. A. 45 

Dennis, Mr. Samuel S. 60 

Dery, Mr. & Mrs. D. George 17 

Desticker, General Dais 

De Vecchi, Miss M. 7 

Devereaux, Mr. Jack 26 

Devereaux, Mrs. Louise Drew 2 6 

De W^itt, Hon. A. K. 46 

Dibert, Samuel D. 31 

Dickson, Miss Helen B. 28 

Dickson, Mrs. William B. 28 

Dietsch, Mr. Harry 60 

Dilkes, Mr. Charles R. 37 

Dilkes, Miss M. L. 37 

Dillon, Mr. & Mrs. Clarence 8 

Dinkey, Mr. & Mrs. A. C. 5 

Dodson, Mr. J. E. 12 

D'Olier, Col. Franklin Dais 
Dorr, Mr. & Mrs. Goldthwaite H. 33 

Drake, Mr. & Mrs. C. W. 121 

Drake, Col. Francis E. Dais 

Drew, Mr. John 26 

Dunham, Mr. & Mrs. Lewis L. 46 

DunLany, Mr. Moran 111 

Dunn, Miss 57 

Dupre, Mr. Marcel 113 

Dwyer, Mr. John F. 2 

Eagle, Mr. & Mrs. H. H. 204 
Easton, Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer D. 109 

Eaton, Mrs. F. H. 121 
Eberstadt, Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph 6 3 

Edwards, Mr. & Mrs. A. G. 24 

Ellis, Col. & Mrs. Richard T. 121 

Emerson, Mr. & Msr. E. W. 18 

Emerson, Mrs. C. F. 18 

Enright, Hon. &: Mrs. R. E. 10 

Faber, Mrs. Annie L. 31 
Fackenthal, Dr. & Mrs. B. F., Jr. 50 

Feeley, Mr. John C. 67 

Felton, Mr. & Mrs. J. Sibley 39 

Felton, Miss Ruth 39 

Ferguson, Mr. Clarence P. 115 

Fessenden, Mr. & Mrs. J. D, 41 

Feustman, Mr. & Mrs. L. P. 38 

Finsthwait, Mr. & Mrs. Frank 24 

Fish, Mr. & Mrs. Henry E. 5 5 

Fitz-Gibbon, Mr. & Mrs. James E. 21 

Flanagan, Mr. John 52 

Fletcher, Mr. Austin B. 6 

Foch, Marshal Dais 

Foraker, Mr. Frank R. 55 

Ford, Mr, & Mrs. F. J. 47 

Ford, Miss Frances 47 



Ford, Mr. & Mrs. Frank R. 37 

Franks, Mr. & Mrs. Jerome 104 

Franks, Mr. Ralph C. 104 

Franks, Mr. Robert A., Jr. 104 

Franks, Mrs. R. A. 104 

Frantz, Mr. & Mrs. P. G. 114 
Frederick, Mr. & Mrs. Jonas H. 49 

Freeman, Mr. & Mrs. M. M. 43 

Freeman, Mr. Theodore 40 

Frew, Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. 6 

Fritz, Mr. Joseph L. 67 
Frueauff, Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. 207 

Gardiner, Mrs. A. 14 

Garland, Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Dais 

Garland, Mrs. Thomas J. 122 

Garrison, Mr. CM. 67 

Garvin, Mr. & Mrs. M. F. 39 

Gawthrop, Mr. & Mrs. C. S. 19 

Getddes, Mr. & Mrs. F. B. 34 

Geer, Mr. G. J. 124 

Geier, Mr. E. C. 54 

Getz Dr. & Mrs. Forry R. 47 

Gifford, Mr. W. Pitt 55 

Gilbert, Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. 45 

Gillespie, Mr. & Mrs. H. L. 27 

Gillespie, Mr. & Mrs. J. P. 27 

Gillespie, Mr. & Mrs. T. A. 27 

Gillespie, Mr. & Mrs. T. H. 27 

Gillett, Col. Melville 209 

Gleason, Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. 203 

Glover, Mr. Nathan B. C. 201 

Godley, Mr. & Mrs. F. A. 51 

Godley, Mr. George 51 

Good, Dr. Robert 10 

Goodbody, Mrs. Marcus 118 

Goodnow, Mrs. Ruby R. 57 

Graham, Mr. C. E. 124 

Graham. Mr. E. R. 12 

Gray, Mr. Austen 57 

Gregg, Mr. & Mrs. John R. 105 

Gribbel, Col. & Mrs. John 28 

Grier, Mr. & Mrs. Alvan R. 30 

Grundy, Mr. Joseph R. 207 

Grundy, Miss Margaret R. 207 

Guggeinheim, Mr. & Mrs. William 7 

Guye, Mr. Charles H. 60 

Gyger, Mr. «fe Mrs. William 48 

Hager, Mr. Edward T. 46 

Hager, Mr. W. H., Jr. 46 

Hager, Mr. & Mrs. W. M. 19 

Hall, Mrs. Thomas 32 

Halsey, Mr. & Mrs. R. T. H. 42 

Hammer, Maj, William J. 61 

Hamilton, Mr. J. R. 117 

Haney, Mr. & Mrs. George J. 202 

Harahan, Mr. W. J. 124 

Hardenbergh, Mrs. E. B. 31 



Harrington, Mrs. W. E. 125 

Harris, Hon. John A. 10 

Harrison, Mr. & Mrs. Benj. V. 112 

Hart, Mrs. John G. 115 

Hart, Mr. Joseph J. 55 

Hartman, Mr. & Mrs. Paul 17 

Haskell, Mr. & Mrs. Frank 51 

Haskins, Mr. B. L. 45 

Hatfield, Mr. & Mrs. Joshua A. 13 

Haussmann, Mr. Charles 117 

Hay, Mr. Ruger W. 42 

Hay, Col. T. A. H 42 
Hayes, Mr. Wade H. Dais 

Hayes, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. 2 

Hazeltine, Maj. R. H. 55 

Hebbard, Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo 3 

Heckman, Mrs. William H. 122 

Hegeman, Mr. & Mrs. B. A., Jr. 41 

Heinl, Mr. Robert D. 4 

Henry, Mr. & Mrs. Philip W. 22 

Hickey, Rev. T. A. 115 

Hickok, Mrs. W. O. IV. 51 

Hixson, Mrs. Henry E. 205 

Hobbs, Mr. Alex F. 20 

Hoffman, Mr. Guy Stuart 53 

Hoffman, Mr. M. R. 53 

Hoffstot, Mr. & Mrs. F. N. 42 

Holton, Mr. Alfred J. S. 57 

Hotchkiss, Mr. Horace L. 6 

Howard Mr. John T. 62 

Howard, Hon. & Mrs. Josiah 62 

Hughes, Mr. E. P. 108 

Hughes, Mr. John 108 

Humphreys. Mrs. William 205 

Hunsicker, Mr. & Mrs. C. O. 208 

Hunsicker, Mr. & Mrs. H. J. 208 

Hunsicker, Mr. James F. 208 

Hutchinson, Mr. & Mrs. A. A. 101 

Hutchinson, A. A., Jr. 101 

Ickelheimer, Mr. H. R. 12 

Irvin, Miss Alice M. 56 

James, Col. & Mrs. E. C. 63 

Jervey, Maj. Huger J. 3 
Johnston, Mr. & Mrs. Archibald 5 

Johnson, Mrs. 32 

Jones, Mr. & Mrs. H. Seaver 27 

Jones. Mr. Williard H. 14 

Jusserand, Mr. J. J. Dais 

Jusserand, Mme. J. J. 5 

Kaufmann, Dr. & Mrs. H. M. 1 

King, Col. Van R. C. Dais 

Keen, Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. 59 

Keiper, Mr. & Mrs. S. M. 118 

Keller, Mrs. W. H. 121 

Kelly, Mr. & Mrs. J. J. 12 3 

Kelly, Miss Molly 15 



Kelly, Mr. Mortimer J. 
Kepliart, Justice & Mrs. J. W. 
King, Mr. & Mrs. David B. 
King, Mrs. Harry G. 
King, Col. Van R. C. 
Kingsley, Mr. Darwin P. 
Kingston, Mr. & Mrs. W. F. 
Kinkead. Mr. Stewart S. 
Kirby, Mr. & Mrs. G. T. 
Kirby, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. 
Klee, Mr. & Mrs. S. 
Klein, Mr. & Mrs. M. M. 
Knobloch, Mr. William R. 
Koons, Mr. & Mrs. T. B. 
Kountze, Col. de Lancey 
Kunkel, Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. 

Langan, Mr. & Mrs. John C. 
Laucks, Mr. S. Forry 
Leach, Dr. & Mrs. Henry G. 
Leavett, Miss C. E. 
Lee, Mr, Thomas J. 
Leeds, Mr. William. D. 
Lemoine, Mr. & Mrs. L. R. 
Lentz, Mr. & Mrs. William O. 
Leps, Mr. Wassili 
Leslie, Mrs. E. A. 
Lewis, Mrs. Frederick T. 
Lewis, Mr. & Mrs. Roger 
Liebert, Mr. Gaston 
Liggett, Mrs. Leigh 
Light, Mr. & Mrs. H. H. 
Lingle, Mr. C. M. 
Lindner, Mr. John 
Little, Mr. & Mrs. John W. 
L'Hopital. Captain Retne 
Lloyd, Mr. & Mrs. John E. 
Loeb, Mr. B. W. 
Long, Mr. John Luther 
Loomis, Mr. & Mrs. E. E. 
Lorenz, Miss R. H. 
Lotte, Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. 
Lotte, Miss Clarissa P. 
Lotte. Mr. & Mrs. Walter C. 
Loughborragh, Mr. J. M. 
Low, Miss Elizabeth A. 
Lowrie, Mr. & Mrs. Roberts 
Lufkin, Mr. & Mrs. E. C. 
Lybrand. Mr. & Mrs. W. M. 



123 

40 

50 

58 

Dais 

Dais 

19 

54 

6 

6 

66 

1 

54 

50 

Dais 

116 

115 

45 
50 

116 
53 
53 
64 

202 

209 
43 

118 

13 

Dais 

35 

23 

61 

39 

37 

Dais 

42 

1 

209 
19 
14 
49 
49 
49 
4 
39 
56 
8 
22 



MacDonald, Mr. George 5 3 

MacFadden, Mr. Elbert H. 65 

MacGowan, Mr. & Mrs. John K. 11 
MacGowan, Miss Helen R. 11 

MacGowan, Miss Mildred T. 11 

MacKelvey, Mr. & Mrs. George A. 42 
MacLaine, Mr. & Mrs. Harold S. 119 
Madden, Mr. William Jay 52 

Madden, Mrs. William Jay, Jr. 52 



Magoffin, Mr. James R. 60 

Mallory, Mrs. Henry R. 32 

Maloney, Mr. Martin 56 

Manners, Mr. J. Hartley 12 

Marcovici, Dr. Eugeme 32 

Markle, Mr. John 3 

Maxey, Hon. & Mrs. George W. 59 

Mazet, Col. & Mrs. Robert 28 

Meek, Mr. & Mrs. J. E. 125 

Mellon, Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. 40 

Memory, Mr. & Mrs. C. H. 24 

Metz, Col. & Mrs. Herman 10 

Michaelsen, Mr. Louis A. 5 3 
Memieirry, Major Jean Dais 

Miller, Gen. & Mrs. Charles 26 

Miller, Mr. W. E. 65 

Millikan, Mr. M. F. 55 

Mitchell. Mr. & Mrs. A. W. 55 
Mills, Hon. Ogden L. Dais 

Monroe, Mr. & Mrs. R. G. 28 

Monteith, Mrs. Frances G. § 

Montgomery, Mr. & Mrs. C. S. 36 

Montgomery, Mrs. R. H. 22 

Montgomery, Mr. & Mrs. W. J. 40 

Moore, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. 52 

Moore, Mr. Wm. Douglas 60 

Moran, Miss Alice H. Ill 

Moran, Mr. Horace 60 

Morris, Mr. Arthur J. 3 

Morris, Mr. & Mrs. Harrison S. 2 6 

Morrison, Miss S. 18 

Motter. Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. 45 

Moyer, Mrs. Horace I. 123 

Muelberger, Mr. <& Mrs. E. 17 

Munn, Mr. Charles Allen 13 

Murdock, Mr. Jacob M. 110 

Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. M. J. 38 

McCahill, Mr. 4 

McClelland, Miss Nancy V. 113 

McCord, Miss Mary N. 122 

McCullough, Capt. C. E. 4 

McGrath, Mr. Dudley 12 

McElheny, Mr. & Mrs. Victor K. 101 

Mcllroy, Mr. & Mrs. George A. 43 

McKeilvy, Mr. & Mrs. Robert 51 

McLanahan, Hon. &. Mrs. J. K. 30 

McNaughton, Mr. & Mrs. James 16 

Nash, Mr. W. A. 6 

Neeland, Mr. & Mrs. Charles 5 

Nelson, Rev. Dr. George F. 4 

Nevin, Miss Frances L. 2 

Nevin, Mrs. John Deinison 203 

Nevin, Mr. & Mrs. William L. 2 

Newbern, Mr. Robert H. 48 

Nicholas, Miss Claribel 47 

Norris, Mrs. Beverly A. 58 

Northrop, Mr. & Mrs. Frank 32 

Noyes, Mr. Charles F. 57 



Noyes, Mrs. Haskell 
Nute, Mr. George H. 
Nut©, Mr. Harold H. 
Nute, Mrs. John Wesley 



29 

206 
206 
206 



Offord, Mr. J. H 12 

Oliver, Mrs. George S. 16 
Olmsted, Mr. «& Mrs. George W. 112 

Ormrod, Mr. & Mrs. John D. 119 

Ormrod, Capt. George H. , 119 

Overholt, Mr. & Mrs. A. C. 64 

Parke, Mr. Hiram H. 60 

Parker, Col. Frank Dais 

Parker, Miss Mary • 31 

Patton. Mrs. A. E. 13 

Perl, Mme. Victor de 118 

Pessano, Mr. & Mrs. A. C. 58 
Peterson, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur D. 48 

Peterson, Mr. & Mrs. Walter 48 

Pedrazzini, Comm. G. 7 

*^hillips, Mr. & Mrs. Ellis L. 112 

Phillips, Mr. & Mrs. Jacob L. 21 

Peirce, Mr. & Mrs. D. O. 14 

Peirce, Mr. & Mrs. Harold 106 

Piatt, Clayton 116 

Piatt, Mr. & Mrs. Richard N. 116 

Ponvert. Mrs. Antonio 6 

Post, Mr. & Mrs. Georg© A. 36 
Post, Mr. & Mrs. George A., Jr. 36 

Postlethwaite. Mr. C. E. 124 

Potter, Mrs. Henry A. 120 

Potter, Miss Katherine 120 

Potter, Mr. Thomas 120 

Prime, Mrs. William 7 

Purcell, Mrs. Joseph 31 

Quicke. Capt. Charlets 7 

Quinlan, Mr. W. E. 117 

Quinn, Mr. & Mrs. T. S. 23 

Quinn, Mrs. T. S.. Sr. 23 

Rainsford, Mrs. Ralph 7 

Rebmann, Miss Elizabeth 15 

Rebmann, Mr. Frederick 15 

Reid, Miss Bessie G. 11 

Reilly, Mrs. John 103 

Ren wick. Miss Julia 14 

Reynolds, Mr. George N. 46 

Richardson, Dr. C. A. 28 

Richardson, Mr. & Mrs. W. H. 44 

Rickard, Mr. & Mrs. Edgar 51 

Riegeil, Mr. & Mrs. B. D. 44 

Riley, Mr. & Mrs. Armin 57 

Robinson, Mrs. Douglas 13 

Robinson, Mr. Earl B. 110 

Robinson, Mr. George T. 110 

Robinson, Mr. & Mrs. J. N. 18 

Robinson, Mrs. Wm. Moore 3 
Rockwell, Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. 16 



Ross, Ira G. 53 

Rothchild. Mrs. Edward S. 7 

Rowe, Mr. Harold 120 

Russell, Mr. & Mrs. Alexander 113 

Russell, Mr. J. B. 62 

Russell, Mr. & Mrs. N. F. S. 64 

Saegeir, Mrs. John F. 119 

Salembier, Mr. A. R. 5 4 

Saul, Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. 3G 

Scholz, Mr. E. A. 65 

Scholz, Mr. Emil M - 49 

Schram, Mr. William 49 

Schwab, Mr. Charles M. Dais 

Schwab, Mrs. Charles M. 5 

Schwab, Mr. & Mrs. E. H. 17 

Schwab, Mr. & Mrs. Frank 114 

Searles, Mr. E. R. 24 

Searles. Mr. & Mrs. J. W. 24 

Shaw, Hon. & Mrs. J. M. 10 

Sheaf er, Mr. & Mrs. Lesley G. 120 

Sheip. Mrs. H. H. 125 

Shields, Mr. & Mrs. James D. Ill 

Shimer, Miss Florence L. 58 

Shoemaker, Dr. \& Mrs. H. W. 44 

Shurtleff, Mr. George F. 209 

Sicher, Mr. Dudley F. 101 

Sicher, Mr. & Mrs. Samuel 61 

Sieppy Mr. Paul G. 121 

Simon, Miss Clara L. 118 

Simpson, Mr. David B. 60 

Skinner, Mr. & Mrs. W. A. 45 
Smith, Mr. & Mrs. George H., Jr. 11 

Smith, Miss Helen 204 

Smith, Mr. & Mrs. J. Stanley 204 

Soubeyran, Lieut. Paul de Dais 

Souder. Mr. & Mrs. Harrison 2 3 

Spackman, Mr. & Mrs. G. D. 34 

Speakman, Mr. & Mrs. C. A. 105 

Speer, Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. 33 

Speer, Mr. Paul 33 

Spencer, Mr. Frank A., Jr. 4* 

Spencer, Mr. Lorillard Dais 

Sproul, Hon. W. C. Dais 

Squier, Mrs 35 

Squier, Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. 35 

Staub, Mr. & Mrs. Walter A. 22 

Stein, Mrs. Marion L. 1 

Stier, Mr. Joseph F. 40 

Stineman, Hon. W. Irving 110 

Stoddard, Mrs. Henry L. 122 

Strachan, Mr. Donald 4 

Straus, Mr. & Mrs. S. W. 66 

Sutro, Mr. & Mrs. Richard 1 

Swartz, Mrs. James S. 60 

Swoope, Mr. & Mrs. H. B. 56 

Sykes, Mr. John P. 16 

Sykes, Miss Annis 16 

Tait. Mrs. A. J. B. Ill 

Talbot, Rt. Rev. Ethelbert 14 



Taylor, Comm. Stevenson 
Taylor, Mr. Vernon F. 
Tener, Miss Ethel D. 
Tener, Mr, Hampden E. 
Thomas, Mrs. Lucien I. 
Thomas, Capt. & Mrs. Shipley 
Thompson, Mr. David R. 
Thompson, Mr. & Mrs. Emmet 
Thompson, Mrs. Wm. Reed 
TTiurman, Mr. & Mrs. I. N. 
Tilge, Mrs. Henry F. 
Tilney, Mr. John S. 
Tilney, Mr. J. Sheldon 
Tobey, Mr. & Mrs. Harry 
Tomlinson, Mr. A. A. 
Tomoney, Miss Mary E. 
Townsend, Rev. S. DeLrancey 
Tredennick, Harry L. 
Trexler, Bishop S. G. 
Tysen, Mrs. Kathleen 
Tyson, Mr. & Mrs. C. R. 



B 



58 

124 
37 
37 
33 
37 
31 

. 65 
35 
63 

103 
26 
26 
20 
67 
38 
35 

110 
35 

113 
46 



Umbel, Hon. & Mrs. Robert E. 10 7 

Umbel, Miss Margaret G. 107 

Underwood, Mr. O. L. 117 

Vauclain, Mr. & Mrs. Jacques L. 16 

Vauclain, Mr. S. M. 16 

Waldo, Mr. Richard H. 15 

Walker, Mr. John D. 54 

Walsh, Mrs. J. R. 205 

Walter, Mr. & Mrs. Paul 5 

Ward, Mr. James H. 108 

Ward, Dr. M. R. 20 

Ward, Mrs. M. R. 5 

Warren, Mr. William C. 67 

Watkins, Mr. T. H. 9 

Watson, Hon. C. W. 12 

Wayne, Mr. & Mrs. Mullin 56 

Weakland, Mrs. C. H. 123 

Wearne. Mr. & Mrs. Harry 102 

Webb, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. 6 3 

Weiss, Mr. W. Monroe 46 



Welch, Miss Helen R. 
Wells. Col. J. Hollis 
Welsh, Mr. Harry S. 
Weston, Mr. & Mrs. John D. 
Whalen, Mrs. Grover A, 
Wheeler, Dr. & Mrs. H. L. 
Whitaker, Mrs. Thomas Drake 
White, Mr. & Mrs. J. D. 
White, Mr. & Mrs. J. G. 
White, Mr. & Mrs. P. J. 
Whitehead, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph 
Wickersham, Col. C. W. 
Yvickersham, Hon. George W. 
Willcox, Mrs. William R. 
Wilmot, Mr. & Mrs. G. W. 
Wilson, Mr. N. T. 
Wingate, Gen. George A. 
Wise, Rabbi Stephen S. 
Witman, Mrs. M. W. 
Wittman, Mr. Joseph 



109 
57 

54 
31 

15 

107 
119 



41 

49 

Dais 

Dais 

122 

59 

63 

Dais 

4 

31 

209 

Woddrop, Mr. & Mrs. C. William 109 
Woddrop, Miss Margaret E. 109 

Wolf, Mr. & Mrs. A. M. 1 

Wolle, Mr. & Mrs. W. S. 202 

Wood, Mr. & Mrs. Grahame 52 

Wood, Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. 52 
Woodin, Mr. & Mrs. W. H. 19 

Woolverton. Mrs. W. H. 103 

Worrilow, Mr. & Mrs. W. H. 23 

W^orth, Mr. & Mrs. E. H. 34 

Worth, Mr. W. A. 34 

Worth, Mr. & Mrs. W. P. 34 

Wright, Mr. A. K. 61 

Wright, Mr. & Mrs. William 7 

Wright, Mr. & Mrs. W. K. 62 

Young, Mr. & Mrs. E. M. 58 

Yungman, Mr. Charles K. 48 

Zehnder, Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. 4 3 

Zehnder, Miss Elmira 43 

Zerbey, Mr. J. H. 117 

Zeirbey, Mr. J. H., Jr. 117 



10 



Table List 



Table 1 

B. W. Loeb 

Dr. & Mrs. H. M. Kaufmann 
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Sutro 
Mr. & Mrs. Milton M. Klein 
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred M. Wolf 
Mrs. Marion L. Stein 



Table 5 

Mrs. Charles M. Schwab 
Mrs. M. R. Ward 
Mr. & Mrs. Archibald Johnston 
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Walter 
Mr. & Mrs. A. C. Dinkey 
Mr. & Mrs, Charles Neeland 
Mme. J. J. Jusserand 



Table 2 

Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Candler 

Mr. M'arsden Candler 

Mr. John F. Dwyer 

Miss Rosalie Candler 

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Hayes 

Mr. & Mrs. William L. Nevin 

Miss Frances L. Nevin 



Table 3 

Mr. John Markle 

Mr. & Mrs. John N. Conyngham 

Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo Hebbard 

Mr. R. D. Bunnell 

Major Huger J. Jervey 

Mrs. Frances G. Monteith 

Mr. Arthur J. Morris 

Mrs. Wm. Moore Robinson 



Table 6 

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E, Kirby 

Mr. W. A. Nash 

Mrs. Antonio Ponvert 

Mr. Horace L. Hotchkiss 

Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. Frew 

Mr. Austin B. Fletcher 

Mr. & Mrs. Gustavus T. Kirby 



Table 7 

Mr. & Mrs. William Guggenheim 
Mr. & Mrs. William Wright 
Capt. Charles Quicke 
Comm. G. Pedrazzini 
Miss M. De Vecohi 
Mrs. William Prime 
Mrs. Ralph Rainsford 
Mrs. E. S. Rothchild 



Table 4 

Rev. Dr. George F. Nelson 
Rabbi Stephen S. Wise 
Mr. Robert D. Heinl 
Mr. Donald Strachan 
Mr. Thomas Brady 
Capt. C. E. McCullough 
Mr. Frank A. Spencer, Jr. 
Mr. J. M. Loughborragh 
Mr. McCahill 



Table 8 

Mr. & Mrs. J. G. White 
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Dillon 
Mr. & Mrs. E. C. Lufkin 
Mr. & Mrs. James D. White 

Table 9 

Mr. T. H. Watkins and party 



11 



Table 10 



Table 15 



Dr. Robert Good 

Hon. & Mrs. R. E. Enright 

Hon. & Mrs. J. M. Shaw 

Hon. John A. Harris 

Mr. & Mrs. E. J. Bienecke 

Col. & Mrs. Herman Metz 

Miss Dorothy Ball 



Mr. Frederick Rebmann 

Miss Elizabeth Rebmann 

Mr. & Mr?. John W. Appel, Jr. 

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Appel 

Mr. John W. Appel, Sr. 

Mr. Richard H. Waldo 

Miss Molly Kelly 

Mrs. Grover A. Whalen 



Table 11 

Mr. & Mrs. John K. MacGowan 

Miss Helen R. MacGowan 

Miss Mildred T. MacGowan 

Miss Bessie G. Reid 

Mr. & Mrs. H. F. Alexander 

Miss Dorothy Alexander 

Mr. & Mrs. George H. Smith, Jr. 



Table 16 

Mr. S. M. Vauclain 

Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. Rockwell 

Mr. & Mrs. Jacques L. Vauclain 

Mrs. George S. Oliver 

Mr. John P. Sykes 

Miss Annie Sykes 

Mr. & Mrs. Franklin Abbott 

Mr. & Mrs. James McNaughton 



Table 12 

Hon. C. W. Watson 
Mr. Benjamin Block 
Dr. F, H. Bermingham 
Mr. J. H. Offord 
Mr. Dudley McGrath 
Mr. C. F. Ahlstrom 
Mr. H. R. Ickelheimer 
Mr. A. H. Carpary 
Mr. J. Hartley Manners 
Mr. J. E. Dodson 
Mr. E. R. Graham 



Table 13 

Mr. & Mrs. Joshua A. Hatfield 
Mrs. Henr:v^ Clinton Backus 
Mrs. W. Harrison Brown 
Miss Elizabeth K. Bray 
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Lewis 
Mrs. A. E. Patton 
Mr. Charles Allen Munn 
Mrs. Douglas Robinson 



Table 17 

Mr. & Mrs. D. George Dery 
Mr. & Mrs. Lincoln Cromwell 
Mr. & Mrs. E. H. Schwab 
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Hartman 
Mr. & Mrs. E. Muelberger 



Table 18 

Mr. & Mrs. William S. Benson 

Miss Jane Benson 

Mr. & Mrs. J. N. Robinson 

Mr. & Mrs. E. W. Emerson 

Mrs. C. F. Emerson 

Mrs. C. B. Benson 

Miss S. Morrison 

Table 19 

Mr. & Mrs. William H. Woodin 
Mr. & Mrs. W. M. Hager 
Mr. & Mrs. W. F. Kingston 
Mr. & Mrs. C. S. Gawthrop 
Mr. & Mrs. E. E. Loomis 



Table 14 

Rt. Rev Ethelbert Talbot 

Miss R. H. Lorenz 

Mr. & Mrs. D. O. Pierce 

Mrs. A. Gardiner 

Williard H. Jones 

Miss Julia Renwick 

Mr. J. Sinclair Armstrong 



Table 20 

Mr. & Mrs. Chester A. Braman 
Miss Mary Foster Barber 
Mr. Alexander F. Hobbs 
Mr. & Mrs. Harry Tobey 
Mr. Kenneth Clarke 
Mrs. J. C. Chamberlain 
Dr. M. R. Ward 



12 



Table 21 



Table 28 



Mr. William M, Barrett 

Mr. & Mrs. Jacob L. Phillips 

Mr. & Mrs. James E. Fitz-Gibbon 

Mr. & Mrs. Walter H. Bennett 

Miss Bennett 

Miss Mary H. Barrett 

Table 22 

Mr. & Mrs. William M. Lybrand 
Mr. & Mrs. Walter A. Staub 
Mrs. R. H. Montgomery 
Mr. & Mrs. Philip W. Henry 
Mr. & Mrs. William F. Carey 



Table 23 

Mr. & Mrs. W. H. Worrilow 

Mr. & Mrs. H. H. Light 

Mr. & Mrs. T. S. Quin 

Mrs. T. S. Quin, Sr. 

Mrs. R. A. Curtiss 

Mr. & Mrs. Harrison Souder 



Table 24 

Mr. & Mrs. A. G. Edwards 
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Finsthwait 
Mr. & Mrs. C. H. MemoiT 
Mr. & Mrs. J. W. Searles 
Mr. E. R. Searles 



Col. & Mrs. John Gribbel 
Col. & Mrs. Robert Mazet 
Brig. Gen. C. I. De Bevoise 
Mr. & Mrs. R. G. Monroe 
Dr. C. A. Richardson 
Mrs. William B. Dickson 
Miss Helen B. Dickson 



Table 29 

Mr. & Mrs. R. D. Benson 
Mr. & Mrs. Axtell J. Byles 
Miss Ethel W. Chase 
Mr. & Mrs. B. D. Benson 
Dr. & Mrs. J. H. Carlisle 
Mrs. Haskell Noyes 



Table 30 

Mr. & Mrs. Alvan R. Grier 
Hon. & Mrs. Thomas J. Baldrige 
Hon. & Mrs. J. K. McLanahan 
Mr. Joseph K. Cass 
Mr. & Mrs. William G. Anderson 



Table 31 



Table 25 
Mr. Edward H. Binns and party 

Table 26 

Gen. & Mrs. Charles Miller 

Mr. John Drew 

Mr. Jack Devereaux 

Mrs. Louise Drew Devereaux 

Mr. John S. Tilney 

Mr. J. Sheldon Tilney 

Mr. & Mrs. Harrison S. Morris 

Mrs. James H. Darlington 

Table 27 

Mr. & Mrs. T. A. Gillespie 

Mr. & Mrs. T. H. Gillespie 

Mr. & Mrs. J. P. Gillespie 

Mr. & Mrs. H. L. Gillespie 

Mr. & Mrs. Seaver Jones 



Mr. & Mrs. John D. Weston 
Mrs. E. B. Hardenbergh 
Miss Mary Parker 
Mr. David R. Thompson 
Mr. Andrew C. Burgoyne 
Mrs. A. L. Faber 
Mrs. Joseph Purcell 
Mr. Samuel D. Dibert 
Mrs. M. W. Witman 



Table 32 

Mr. & Mrs. Frank Northrop 

Mrs. Henry R. Mallory 

Mrs. Wm. Harrison Day 

Mrs. Thomas Hall 

Mrs. Johnson 

Miss Mary I. Boy en 

Mrs. Carter 

Dr. George L. Curtis 

Dr. Eugene Marcovici 



13 



Table 33 



Table 39 



Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Speer 

Mr. Martin Carey 

Miss Carey 

Mr. & Mrs. Goldwaite H. Dorr 

Mr. & Mrs. Howard E. Cole 

Mrs. Lucien I. Thomas 

Mr. Paul Spe^r 



Mr. & Mrs. M. F. Garvin 

Mr. Jolin Lindner 

Mr. & Mrs. J. Shipley Felton 

Miss Ruth Felton 

Mrs. Abbot S. Cooke 

Miss Cooke 

Miss Elizabeth A. Low 



Table 34 

Mr. & Mrs. W. P. Worth 

Mr. & Mrs. E. H. Worth 

Mr. W. A. Worth 

Miss N. E. Davis 

Mr. & Mrs. F. B. Geddes 

Mr. & Mrs. G. D. Spackman 

Table 35 



Table 40 

Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Mellon 

Mrs. Charles Allen Cregin 

Mr. Theodore Freeman 

Hon. & Mrs. John W. Kephart 

Mr. Joseph F. Stier 

Mrs. Vida R. Cornell 

Mr. «S: Mrs. W. J. Montgomery 



Mrs. Squier 

Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Squier 

Rev. S. DeLancey Townsend 

Mrs. Leigh Liggett 

Bishop S. G. Trexler 

Mrs. Wm. Reed Thompson 

Mme. Rene de Choiseul 

Mrs. Mary Arnold Bollard 

Mrs. Irving Badger 

Table 36 

Mr. & Mrs. George A. Post 
Mr, & Mrs. George A. Post, Jr. 
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Saul 
Mr. & Mrs. C. S. Montgomery 
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Davis 



Table 41 

Mr. & Mrs. James D Fessenden 

Mr. & Mrs. P. J. White 

Mr. & Mrs. H. A. Aaron 

Mr. & Mrs. B. A. Hegeman, Jr. 



Table 42 

Mr. & Mrs. F. N. Hoffstot 

Mr. & Mrs. R. T. H. Halsey 

Col. Thomas A. H. Hay 

Mr. Ruger W. Hay 

Mr. & Mrs. George A. MacKelvey 

Mr. & Mrs. John E. Lloyd 



Table 37 

Mr. Hampden E. Tener 

Miss Ethel D. Tener 

Mr. & Mrs. John W. Little 

Mr. George R. Dilkes 

Miss M. L. Dilkes 

Mr. & Mrs. Frank R. Ford 

Capt. & Mrs. Shipley Thomas 



Table 43 

Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Zehnder 

Miss Elmira Zehnder 

Mrs. E. A. Leslie 

Mr. & Mrs. George A. Mcllroy 

Mr. & Mrs, Theron I. Crane 

Mr. & Mrs. M. M. Freeman 



Table 38 

Mr. & Mrs. M. J. Murphy 
Miss Mary E. Tomoney 
Mr. Alexander L. Brodhead 
Miss Susan W. Brodhead 
Mr. & Mrs. L. P. Feustman 
Mr. & Mrs. George L. Adams 
Mr. Edward D. Adams 



Table 44 

Mr. & Mrs. W. H. Richardson 

Mr. & Mrs. B. D. Riegel 

Mr, Charles S. Boll 

Mr, Charles W. Boll 

Dr. & Mrs. H. W. Shoemaker 

Mr, & Mrs. Kerfoot W. Daly 



14 



Table 45 



Table 51 



Mr. S. Forry Laucks 

Mr. B. L. Haskins 

Mr. C. H. Dempwolf 

Mr. J. A. Dempwolf 

Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Motter 

Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Gilbert 

Mr. & Mrs. William A. Skinner 



Mr & Mrs. Robert McKelvey 
Mr. & Mrs. F. A. Godley 
Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Rickard 
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Haskell 
Mrs. W. O. Hickok, IV. 
Mr. George Godley 



Table 46 



Table 52 



Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Tyson 
Hon. Asa K. De Witt 
Mr. W. Monroe Weiss 
Mr. Alexis B. Blanctiard 
Mr. William H. Hager, Jr. 
Mr. Edward 1\ Hager 
Mr. & Mrs. Lewis L. Dunham 
Mr. George N. Reynolds 



Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Moore 
Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Wood 
Mr. & Mrs. Grahame Wood 
Mr. Lawrence E. Brown 
Mr. William Jay Madden 
Mrs. William Jay Madden, Jr. 
Mr. John Flanagan 



Table 47 



Table 53 



Mr. & Mrs. F. J. Ford 

Miss Frances Ford 

Miss Claribel Nicholas 

Mr. & Mrs. John W. Coulston 

Mr. & Mrs. W. Ivan Coulston 

Dr. & Mrs. ForiT R- Getz 



Table 48 

Mr. & Mrs. Walter Peterson 
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur D. Peterson 
Mr. & Mrs. William Gyger 
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Byrne 
Mr. Charles K. Yungman 
Mr. Robert H. Newbern 



Table 49 

Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Lotte 
Mr, & Mrs. Joseph Whitehead 
Mr. William Schram 
Mr. & Mrs. Jonas H. Frederick 
Mr. & Mrs. Walter C. Lotte 
Miss Clarissa P. Lotte 



Mr. Oliver J. Decker 
Mr. Ira G. Ross 
Mr. Thomas J. Lee 
Mr. William D. Leeds 
Mr. William P. Brew 
Mr. Louis A. Michaelson 
Mr. "George MacDonald 
Mr. Michael R. Hoffman 
Mr. Guy Stuart Hoffman 
Mr. C. C. Adams 



Table 54 

Mr. Harry S. Welsh 
Mr. William R. Knobloch 
Mr. E. Buhler 
Mr. E. C. Geier 
Mr. P. C. Debry 
Mr. A. R. Salembier 
Mr. John D. Walker 
Mr. Stewart S. Kinkead 



Table 55 



Table 50 

Mr. & Mrs. David B. King 
Mr. & Mrs. T. B. Koons 
Dr. & Mrs. Henry G. Leach 
Dr. & Mrs B. F. Fackenthal, Jr. 
Capt. & Mrs. H. P. Childs 



Mr. Joseph J. Hart 
Mr. M. F. Millikan 
Mr. Frank R. Foraker 
Mr. George G. Cooke 
Maj. R. H, Hazeltine 
Mr. & Mrs. Henry E. Fish 
Mr, & Mrs. A. W. Mitchell 
Mr. W. Pitt Gifford 



15 



Table 56 



Table 61 



Mr. & Mrs. H. B. Swoope 
Mr. & Mrs. Roberts Lowrie 
Miss Alice M. Irvin 
Mr. & Mrs. W. Collins 
Mr. & Mrs. Martin Maloney 
Mr, & Mrs. Mullln Wayne 



Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Sicher 

Mr. & Mrs. Henry Bernhard 

Mr. Nils Anderson 

Mr. C. M. Lingle 

Mr. A. K. Wright 

Major William J. Hammer 



Table 57 

Col. J. Hollis Wells 
Mr. Alfred J. S. Holton 
Mr. Charles F. Noyes 
Miss Dunn 

Mr. & Mrs. Armin Riley 
Mrs. Ruby R. Groodnow 
Mr. Austen Gray 



Table 62 

Hon, & Mrs, Josiah Howard 
Mr. & Mrs. W. K, Wright 
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Auchu 
Mr. John T. Howard 
Mr, George M, Brooks 
Mr. J. B. Russell 



~iable 63 



Table 58 

Mr. & Mrs. Antonio C. Pessano 
Comm. Stevenson Taylor 
Mr. & Mrs. W. H. Anewalt 
Mr. & Mrs. E. M, Young 
Mrs. Harry G. King 
Mrs. Beverly A. Norris 
Miss Florence L, Shimer 



Table 59 



Mr. C. W, Bender 
Mr, & Mrs. I. N, Thurman 
Col. & Mrs. E. C, James 
Mr. & Mrs, Rudolph Eberstadt 
Mr, & Mrs, Thomas D, Webb 
Mr, N. T. Wilson 



Table 64 

Mr. & Mrs. A. C. Overholt 
Mr. & Mrs, W. T, C, Carpenter 
Mr. & Mrs. L. R. Lemoine 
Mr. & Mrs, N. F, S. Russell 



Hon. & Mrs, George W, Maxey 
Mr. & Mrs. Frank P. Benjamin 
Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Keen 
Dr. & Mrs. Olin G, A, Barker 
Mr. & Mrs. G. W. Wilmot 



Table 60 

Mr. James R. MagoflBn 
Mr. Wm. Douglas Moore 
Mr, Horace Moran 
Mr. Hiram H, Parke 
Mr, Samuel S. Dennis 
Mr. Harry Diets ch 
Mr, Preston M. Brock 
Mr. Charles H. Guye 
Mr, James S. Swartz 
Mr. David B. Simpson 



Table 65 

Mr. & Mrs. Emmet B. Thompson 

Bishop B. Fortuna Broderick 

Dr. & Mrs. J. M. DeBermingham 

Mr. H. A. Ahearn 

Mr. Emil M. Scholz 

Mr. E. A. Scholz 

Mr. Elbert H. MacFadden 

Mr. W. E. Miller 



Table 66 

Mr. & Mrs. Sigmund Klee 
Mr. & Mrs. A. Bernhard 
Mr. & Mrs. S, W, Straus 
Mr. & Mrs, E, B. Bernhard 



Table 67 



Table 108 



Mr. C. M. Garrison 

Mr. John C. Feeley 

Mr. Charles H. Clarkson 

Mr. Joseph L, Fritz 

Mr. George W. Balderston 

Mr. William C. Warren 

Mr. A. A. Tomlinson 



Table 101 

Mr. & Mrs. A. A. Hutchinson 
Mr. A. A. Hutchinson, Jr. 
Mr. & Mrs. Victor K. McElheny 
Mr. Dudley F. Sicher 



Table 102 

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Cawthra 
Mr. & Mrs. Harry Weame 
Mr. & Mrs. Charles I. Berg 



Mr. J. H. Ward 
Mr. E. P. Hughes 
Mr. John Hughes 

Table 109 

Mr. & Mrs. C. William Woddrop 
Miss Margaret E. Woddrop 
Miss Helen R. Welch 
Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer D. Easton 

Table 110 

Hon. W. Irving Stineman 
Mr. George T. Robinson 
Mr. Earl B. Robinson 
Mr. Jacob M. Murdock 
Mr. L. R. Custer 
Mr. Harry L. Tredennick 

Table 111 



Table 103 

Mr. & Mrs. William P. Beaver 

Mrs. W. H. Woolverton 

Mrs. Henry F. Tilge 

Mrs. John Reilly 

Miss Marguerite A. Campbell 



Table 104 

Mrs. R. A. Franks 
Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Franks 
Mr. Robert A. Franks, Jr. 
Mr. Ralph C. Franks 

Table 105 

Mr. & Mrs. A. C. Speakman 
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Gregg 
Mr. & Mrs. Chester W. Cuthell 

Table 106 

Mr. & Mrs. Harold Peirce 
Dr. & Mrs. Samuel A. Brown 

Table 107 
Hon. & Mrs. Robert E. Umbel 
Miss Margaret G. Umbel 
Dr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Wheeler 
Mr. John C. Barclay 



Miss Alice H. Moran 

Mr. Moran DunLany 

Mr. & Mrs. James D. Shields 

Miss Emma E. Davis 

Mrs. A. J. B. Tait 

Table 112 

Mr. & Mrs. George W. Olmsted 
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin V. Harrison 
Mr. & Mrs. Ellis L. Phillips 

Table 113 

Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Russell 
Mr. Charles M. Courboin 
Mr. Marcel Dupre 
Miss Nancy V. McClelland 
Mrs. Kathleen Tysen 

Table 114 

Mr. & Mrs. H. H. Albright 

Mr. & Mrs. Frantz 

Mr. & Mrs. Frank Schwab 

Table 115 

Mr. & Mrs. John C. Langan 
Mrs. John G. Hart 
Mr. Clarence P. Ferguson 
Rev. T. A. Hickey 



17 



Table 116 



Table 122 



Mr. Clayton Piatt 

Mr. & Mrs. Ricliard N. Piatt 

Miss C. E. Leavett 

Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Kunkel 



Table 117 



Mrs. Thomas J. Garland 
Mrs. Henry L. Stoddard 
Mrs. William R. Willcox 
Mrs. William H. Heckman 
Miss Anna L. Brodhead 
Miss Emily E. Brodhead 
Miss Mary N. McCord 



Mr. John Henry Zerbey 

Mr. Charles Haussmaxi 

Mr. O. L. Underwood 

Mr. E. L. Clifford 

Mr. W. E. Qninlan 

Mr. Robert Braun 

Mr. J. R. Hamilton 

Mr. Joseph Henry Zerbey, Jr. 



Table 123 

Mr. & Mrs. J. J. Kelly 

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Clare 

Mr. Mortimer J. Kelly 

Mrs. C. H. Weakland 

Mrs. Horace I. Mover 

Mrs. Charles Bainbridge 



Table 118 

Mr. & Mrs. S. M. Keiper 
Miss Clara L. Simon 
Mrs. Frederick T. Lewis 
Mme. Victor de Perl 
Mrs. Marcus Coodbody 



Table 124 

Mr. C. E. Postlethwaite 
Mr. W. J. Harahan 
Mr. C. E. Graham 
Mr. P. E. Crowley 
Mr. Vernon F. Taylor 
Mr. G. J. Geer 



Table 119 

Mr. & Mrs. John D. Ormrod 
Ca.pt. George H. Ormrod 
Mr. Gurney F. Afflerback 
Mrs. Thomas Drake Whitaker 
Mr. & Mrs. Harold S. MacLaine 
Mrs. John F. Saeger 



Table 125 

Mr. & Mrs. J. E. Meek 

Mrs. John Bremond 

Mrs, Howard S. Bremond 

Mrs. H. H. Sheip 

Mr. R. Arkush 

Miss A. Arkush 

Mrs. W. E. Harrington 



Table 120 

Mrs. Henry A. Potter 

Mrs. Ellis Adams 

Miss Mavis Benedict 

Miss Katherine Potter 

Mr. Thomas Potter 

Mr. & Mrs. Lesley G. Sheafer 

Mr. Harold Rowe 



Table 121 



Table 201 

Miss Martha L. Crary 
Miss Sara W. Crary 
Miss Natalie B. Crary 
Miss Eloise Bohlayer 
Mr. Nathan B. C. Glover 

Table 202 

Mr. & Mrs. William S. Wolle 
Mr. & Mrs. George J. Haney 
Mr. & Mrs. William O. Lentz 



Mrs. F. H. Eaton 

Col. & Mrs. Richard T. Ellis 

Mr. & Mrs. C. W. Drake 

Mrs W. H. Keller 

Mr. Paul C. Sieppy 



Table 203 

Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. Gleason 
Mrs. John Denison Nevin 
Mr. & Mrs. A. W. Bigler 



18 



Table 204 

Mr. & Mrs. H. H. Eagle 
Mr. C. W. Billings 
Mr. & Mrs. J. Stanley Smitli 
Miss Helen Smith 



Table 207 

Mr. Joseph R. Grundy 
Miss Margaret R. Grundy 
Mr. & Mrs. Murray Boocock 
Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Frueauff 



Table 205 

Mrs. John S. Biesecker 
Mrs. Henry ,E. Hixson 
Col. Telamon Cuyler 
Mrs. William Humphreys 
Mrs. J. R. Walsh 



Table 208 

Mr. & Mrs. C. O. Hunsicker 
Mrs. James F. Hunsicker 
Mr. & Mrs, H. J. Hunsicker 



Table 206 

Mrs. John Wesley Nute 
Mr. George H. Nute 
Mr. Harold H. Nute 
Mr. James C. Cassell 



Table 209 

Mr. George F. Shurtleff 
Col. Melville Gillett 
Mr. Joseph Wittman 
Mr. Wassili Leps 
Mr. John Luther Long 



19 



